Philip Morris USA, Inc. v. Duignan , 243 So. 3d 426 ( 2017 )


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  •                NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    PHILIP MORRIS USA, INC.; R.J.       )
    REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY;           )
    LORILLARD TOBACCO COMPANY;          )
    and LORILLARD, INC.,                )
    )
    Appellants,            )
    )
    v.                                  )                     Case No. 2D15-5055
    )
    KEVIN DUIGNAN, as personal          )
    representative of the Estate of     )
    Douglas Clarence Duignan, deceased, )
    )
    Appellee.              )
    ___________________________________ )
    Opinion filed November 15, 2017.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Pinellas
    County; Jack Day, Judge.
    Cathy A. Kamm, Terri L. Parker, Daniel F.
    Molony, and Razvan Axente of Shook,
    Hardy & Bacon, L.L.P., Tampa; Geoffrey
    J. Michael and Daphne O'Connor of Arnold
    & Porter LLP, Washington, District of
    Columbia; Gregory G. Katsas of Jones Day
    (withdrew after briefing), Washington,
    District of Columbia; and Charles R.A.
    Morse of Jones Day, New York, New
    York, for Appellants.
    David J. Sales, Daniel R. Hoffman of
    David J. Sales, P.A., Jupiter; Gary M.
    Paige, Robert E. Gordon of Gordon &
    Doner, P.A., Davie; James W. Gustafson,
    Jr. of Searcy Denney Scarola Barnhart &
    Shipley, P.A., Tallahassee, for Appellee.
    SALARIO, Judge.
    Philip Morris USA, Inc. (PM) and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
    (Reynolds) appeal from a final judgment entered in favor of Kevin Duignan, the personal
    representative of the Estate of Douglas Clarence Duignan (the Estate).1 Douglas
    Duignan smoked cigarettes made by PM and Reynolds and later died of cancer, which
    led to the filing of this Engle2 progeny suit by the Estate. We reverse and remand for a
    new trial primarily because in responding to a note from the jury concerning the
    testimony of Dennis Duignan, the decedent's brother and an important witness for the
    defense, the trial court gave an answer improperly calculated to prevent the jury from
    requesting a readback of that testimony. With respect to the Estate's claims for fraud by
    concealment and conspiracy to commit fraud by concealment, we further conclude that
    the trial court erroneously instructed the jury on the element of detrimental reliance.
    The Trial Of This Engle Progeny Case
    Background. For the benefit of the reader unfamiliar with tobacco litigation
    in Florida, Engle progeny cases differ from ordinary product defect or wrongful death
    cases in that they go to trial with certain factual matters having been conclusively
    established as a result of the supreme court's decision in Engle v. Liggett Group, 945
    1
    Lorillard Tobacco Company is also named as an appellant here.
    Lorillard, however, has been merged into Reynolds, and Reynolds' liability in this case
    includes liability as a successor-by-merger to Lorillard.
    2
    Engle v. Liggett Grp., 
    945 So. 2d 1246
    (Fla. 2006).
    -2-
    So. 2d 1246 (Fla. 2006). Engle was a class action brought against several tobacco
    companies—PM and Reynolds included—on behalf of Florida-resident smokers who
    developed smoking-related illnesses caused by addiction to cigarettes containing
    nicotine. Trial verdicts established liability, compensatory damages for the class
    representatives, and the entitlement to and the amount of punitive damages for the
    class. The tobacco companies appealed, and the case reached the Florida Supreme
    Court. The supreme court decertified the class and vacated the punitive damages
    award—with the result being that individual members of the Engle class must pursue
    individual damages actions in order to recover for smoking-related illnesses. 
    Id. at 1254.
    Although it decertified the class, the supreme court nonetheless held that
    certain liability findings—so-called Phase I findings—made by the Engle jury could
    stand and govern in individual actions by Engle class members. 
    Id. at 1254-55.
    The
    retained Phase I findings include findings that smoking cigarettes causes certain
    diseases (including lung cancer), that nicotine is addictive, that the tobacco companies
    placed cigarettes on the market that were defective and unreasonably dangerous, that
    the tobacco companies were negligent, and that the tobacco companies concealed or
    omitted material information about the health effects and addictive nature of cigarettes
    and also conspired with one another to do so. 
    Id. at 1257
    n.4, 1276-77. To take
    advantage of these findings in an individual suit, a plaintiff must establish membership
    in the Engle class by proving that before November 21, 1996, the plaintiff had
    developed one of the illnesses found by the Engle jury to be caused by smoking and
    that the plaintiff's illness was caused by an addiction to cigarettes containing nicotine.
    -3-
    
    Id. at 1256,
    1277. If an individual plaintiff demonstrates class membership, the retained
    Phase I findings are taken as conclusively established for purposes of the individual's
    action. 
    Id. at 1277.
    This particular Engle progeny case proceeded to trial on an amended
    complaint which alleged that before November 21, 1996, Douglas Duignan developed
    lung cancer as a result of having been addicted to cigarettes containing nicotine. It
    asserted claims for strict liability, negligence, fraud by concealment, and conspiracy to
    commit fraud by concealment and sought compensatory and punitive damages. The
    Estate acknowledged that Douglas Duignan bore some responsibility for his smoking
    and asked for an apportionment of fault and damages on his nonintentional tort
    claims—i.e., the claims for strict liability and negligence.
    The trial evidence. The trial court held a two-phase trial. The first phase
    was to determine the issues of Engle class membership, comparative fault, legal
    causation on the Estate's fraud and conspiracy claims, and the Estate's entitlement—if
    any—to punitive damages. The Estate presented evidence that Douglas Duignan
    began smoking at fourteen and had become a regular smoker by his midteens. It also
    presented evidence that he exhibited behaviors consistent with nicotine addiction, that
    he made several unsuccessful attempts to quit smoking, and that he smoked light and
    filtered cigarettes because he believed them to be safer alternatives. In 1992, when he
    was forty-two years old, doctors discovered a cancerous tumor in Douglas Duignan's
    lung and later found that there was cancer elsewhere in his body. He died thereafter.
    As to the fraud and conspiracy claims, the Estate put on evidence that PM
    and Reynolds, together with many other tobacco companies, conspired over several
    -4-
    decades to conceal what they knew about the addictive properties and health effects of
    smoking cigarettes. This included evidence of tobacco company advertising that
    depicted cigarette smoking as glamorous and even healthy, the tobacco companies'
    creation of a false controversy in the public debate designed to prolong doubt as to the
    addictive properties and health effects of cigarette smoking, the promotion of the idea
    that smoking light and filtered cigarettes reduced the risks associated with smoking, and
    internal tobacco company documents showing what the tobacco companies actually
    knew about nicotine addiction and smoking-related disease.
    PM and Reynolds' defense, in contrast, focused substantially on a theory
    that Douglas Duignan smoked because he liked smoking rather than because he was
    addicted to nicotine or because he was misinformed about the risks. This theory put the
    following items at issue: (1) Engle class membership (Douglas Duignan's affinity for
    smoking, rather than his addiction to cigarettes, was the legal cause of his cancer), (2)
    legal causation on the fraud and conspiracy claims (he knew the material health risks of
    smoking and did not rely on any concealed or omitted facts), and (3) comparative fault
    (his decision to keep smoking was his own).
    PM and Reynolds put on evidence that significant information about the
    adverse consequences of cigarette smoking generally was known to the public and
    specifically was known to Douglas Duignan from the time he began smoking. They also
    offered the testimony of Dennis Duignan, who lived in Washington State. Although he
    did not appear in person at trial, portions of his deposition testimony were read to the
    jury as evidence by the parties, with the trial lawyers playing the parts of questioner and
    witness. Dennis Duignan testified that he and his brother referred to cigarettes using
    -5-
    slang terms including "cancer sticks" and "coffin nails." He further testified about a
    conversation with his brother that occurred sometime in the 1970s, during which
    Douglas Duignan said that his doctor had told him "that if he didn't quit smoking, he'd be
    dead in five years." When Dennis Duignan asked his brother whether he planned to
    quit, Douglas Duignan replied that he did not plan to quit because he liked smoking.
    The Estate questioned both the veracity of this testimony and the timing of the
    conversation. Both sides addressed it in opening statements and closing arguments.
    The instructions on fraud and concealment. At the close of the trial, the
    jury was instructed to determine whether Douglas Duignan was a member of the Engle
    class and, if he was, that it "must accept [certain] previously determined matters as true
    . . . just as if you had determined them yourselves." A finding that Douglas Duignan
    was a member of the Engle class coupled with the preclusive effect of the retained
    Phase I findings on strict liability and negligence resolved the Estate's claims for strict
    liability and negligence, with the exception of the issues of comparative negligence and
    damages, as to which the jury was also instructed.
    As relevant to the claims for fraud and conspiracy, the jury was instructed
    that the retained Phase I findings conclusively established both that PM and Reynolds
    each "concealed or omitted material information" about the adverse effects of smoking
    and also that they "entered into an agreement" with other tobacco companies "to
    conceal or omit information" regarding those matters. Those findings alone did not
    resolve the claims for fraud and conspiracy, however, and the jury was required to
    determine legal causation, which centered on the issue of detrimental reliance.
    -6-
    PM and Reynolds requested an instruction that required the jury to find
    that Douglas Duignan detrimentally and reasonably relied on "a statement" by each of
    them (with respect to the fraud claim) and by a member of the conspiracy (with respect
    to the conspiracy claim) and that such reliance was the cause of his cancer. The trial
    court rejected that instruction and gave the jury a different special instruction concerning
    the reliance element of the fraud claim:
    The issue for your determination on Plaintiff's claims for
    concealment is whether the concealment or omission of
    material information regarding the health effects of cigarettes
    or their addictive nature by [PM and Reynolds] was a legal
    cause of Douglas Duignan's lung cancer because Mr.
    Duignan reasonably relied to his detriment that [PM and
    Reynolds] would not conceal or omit disclosure of such
    material information.
    (Emphasis added.) The court gave a similar special instruction with respect to the
    conspiracy claim:
    The next issue for your determination will be whether the
    agreement to conceal or omit material information previously
    described was a legal cause of Douglas Duignan's lung
    cancer because Mr. Duignan reasonably relied to his
    detriment that [PM and Reynolds] would not conceal or omit
    disclosure of such material information either alone or in
    conjunction with others . . . .
    (Emphasis added.)
    The jury note. During its Phase I deliberations, the jury sent the court a
    note about how to locate specific portions of the evidence to review, asking as follows:
    "Is there a key for the evidence? We are having trouble finding things in the evidence
    boxes. If not, can we have the number for Dennis Duignan's deposition?" During a
    discussion with counsel over a potential response to this question, the parties and court
    considered whether and how to advise the jury about the possibility that the deposition
    -7-
    testimony read to the jury during the trial could be read back to the jury upon request.
    The trial court expressed concern that allowing a readback of Dennis Duignan's
    testimony would open a "Pandora's box" and perhaps give "undue influence" to that
    testimony. The trial court proposed to instruct the jury that "[t]estimony is not generally
    read back to a jury. There is a possibility under some circumstances." PM and
    Reynolds objected to that instruction and proposed simply advising the jury that a
    readback was possible.
    The court declined. It brought the jury in, explained that no transcript was
    available, and told the jury as follows:
    [T]here's sort of a magic that happens with the six of you
    putting your recollections together, it's called collective
    recollection, and you are urged, in regard to all testimony in
    the case, to use your collective recollection.
    It is not impossible to read testimony back to a jury, but it is
    not generally done. And part of that is to—so that no
    witness's testimony gets a—more focus or attention than
    anybody's, gets undue emphasis that way.
    The verdicts and judgment. The jury then returned a verdict that, in
    essence, determined that Douglas Duignan was a member of the Engle class and found
    in the Estate's favor on all claims. It awarded $6,000,000 in compensatory damages
    and found that the Estate was entitled to punitive damages. It apportioned fault as
    follows: 37% to PM, 30% to Reynolds, and 33% to Douglas Duignan. After the second
    phase of the trial, the jury awarded punitive damages of $3.5 million against PM and
    $2.5 million against Reynolds.
    The trial court entered a judgment against PM and Reynolds finding them
    jointly and severally liable for the entire compensatory damage award, irrespective of
    -8-
    the jury's comparative fault allocation, because the Estate had prevailed on its
    intentional tort claims and damages on such claims are not apportioned based on
    comparative fault. PM and Reynolds requested that the trial court apply a credit to the
    punitive damages award based on a "Guaranteed Sum Stipulation" entered into by the
    parties in the original Engle litigation regarding the punitive damage award in that case.
    The trial court denied that request, and its judgment included the punitive damages
    awards the jury made. PM and Reynolds timely appeal the judgment.
    The Issues On Appeal
    PM and Reynolds raise four issues.3 First, they assert that the trial court's
    response to the jury note concerning Dennis Duignan's testimony both improperly
    discouraged the jury from requesting a readback and, by advising the jury that a
    readback would give "undue influence" to the testimony, improperly commented on the
    evidence. Second, they argue that the trial court's instructions to the jury on the
    reliance element of the Estate's fraud-based claims were erroneous because they failed
    to require the jury to find that Douglas Duignan relied on "a statement" by one of the
    tobacco companies. Third, they claim that the trial court erred by failing to reduce the
    compensatory damages award based on the jury's comparative fault allocation because
    Engle progeny cases are grounded in negligence, not intentional torts, and principles of
    3
    They also seek to preserve for review in the United States Supreme
    Court their arguments that it violates due process to allow an Engle progeny plaintiff to
    establish the conduct elements of his or her claims and that federal law impliedly
    preempts strict liability and negligence claims based on the Engle findings. The first of
    those arguments was rejected by the Florida Supreme Court in Philip Morris USA, Inc.
    v. Douglas, 
    110 So. 3d 419
    , 430-36 (Fla. 2013), and the second was rejected by the
    Florida Supreme Court in R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. Marotta, 
    214 So. 3d 590
    , 605
    (Fla. 2017).
    -9-
    comparative fault therefore apply notwithstanding the Estate's assertion of claims for
    fraud by concealment and conspiracy. And fourth, they contend that they are entitled to
    a credit against the punitive damage award based on the Guaranteed Sum Stipulation
    between the tobacco companies and the Engle class in the original Engle litigation.
    After oral argument in this case, this court issued an opinion in another
    case deciding the issues of whether comparative fault applies when an Engle defendant
    is found liable for intentional torts and whether the Guaranteed Sum Stipulation in the
    original Engle litigation requires application of a credit to a punitive damages award
    adversely to PM and Reynolds. See Philip Morris USA Inc. v. Boatright, 
    217 So. 3d 166
    (Fla. 2d DCA 2017), appeal filed, No. SC17-894 (Fla. May 12, 2017). We therefore find
    no merit in PM and Reynolds' third and fourth issues. As to the third issue concerning
    comparative fault, we certify conflict, as we did in Boatright, with R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
    Co. v. Schoeff, 
    178 So. 3d 487
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2015), review granted, No. SC15-2233,
    
    2016 WL 3127698
    , *1 (Fla. May 26, 2016), and the line of cases relying on it.4 We
    further address PM and Reynolds' first two issues concerning the readback and the
    reliance instructions below.
    The Trial Court's Readback Instruction
    We review a trial court's decision regarding readbacks of trial testimony for
    abuse of discretion, State v. Barrow, 
    91 So. 3d 826
    , 835 (Fla. 2012), and we also apply
    that standard to review a trial court's response to a jury question, Cannon v. State, 180
    4
    Philip Morris USA Inc. v. McKeever, 
    207 So. 3d 907
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2017);
    R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. Grossman, 
    211 So. 3d 221
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2017); R.J.
    Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. Calloway, 
    201 So. 3d 753
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2016), review
    denied, No. SC16-1937, 
    2017 WL 1023712
    , *1 (Fla. Mar. 16, 2017), cert. denied, No.
    16-1507, 
    2017 WL 1023712
    (Oct. 2, 2017).
    - 10 -
    So. 3d 1023, 1036 (Fla. 2015). The trial court's response in this case—that although a
    readback was "not impossible," it "is not generally done" and that the jury should rely on
    its "collective recollection"—was an abuse of discretion because it was calculated to
    prevent the jury from asking for a readback and thereby interfered with the jury's ability
    to discharge its duties as the finder of fact in this case.5
    The leading case on readbacks of trial testimony in Florida is Hazuri v.
    State, 
    91 So. 3d 836
    (Fla. 2012). In Hazuri, a jury in a criminal trial sent the judge a
    note asking to see trial transcripts. The defendant argued that the right response to the
    request was to tell the jury that transcripts were not available but that it could have read
    back to it whatever testimony it wanted. The trial court disagreed and told the jury only
    that transcripts were not available and that it should rely on its "collective recollection" of
    the evidence to decide the case. 
    Id. at 839.
    The defendant appealed his subsequent
    conviction, arguing that the trial court erred when it refused to tell the jury that it could
    have parts of the transcript read back. After the Third District affirmed, Hazuri v. State,
    
    23 So. 3d 857
    (Fla. 3d DCA 2009), the supreme court accepted jurisdiction.
    The supreme court quashed the Third District's decision and held that the
    trial court abused its discretion in failing to inform the jury of its right to request a
    
    readback. 91 So. 3d at 846-47
    . It began by observing that the jury did not request a
    readback—it only requested transcripts—but decided that the trial court was required to
    inform the jury of the possibility of a readback nonetheless. 
    Id. at 845.
    It tethered this
    holding to the core function of the jury, explaining that "the role of a jury as a factfinder
    5
    To the extent the Estate contends that this error was either unpreserved
    or waived, the contention is, on our review of the record, without merit.
    - 11 -
    is of utmost importance" and that "a jury cannot properly fulfill its constitutionally
    mandated role if it cannot recall or is confused about the testimony presented in a
    case." 
    Id. Because "[a]
    jury is composed of laypersons often unfamiliar with legal terms
    of art," the court explained, "there should be no magic words required for a read-back
    request." 
    Id. "Failing to
    require further instruction concerning a read-back after a jury
    has requested transcripts leaves the jury without the means to refresh its memory of
    witness testimony—testimony that could be critical to the outcome of the verdict." 
    Id. The court
    thus adopted "the following two rules: (1) a trial court should not
    use any language that would mislead a jury into believing read-backs are prohibited,
    and (2) when a jury requests trial transcripts, the trial judge should deny the request, but
    inform the jury of the possibility of a read-back." 
    Id. at 846;
    see also 
    Barrow, 91 So. 3d at 834
    (restating rules announced in Hazuri). "A trial judge can respond to a request for
    transcripts in the following manner: 'Transcripts are not available, but you can request to
    have any testimony read back to you, which may or may not be granted at the court's
    discretion.' " 
    Hazuri, 91 So. 3d at 846
    .
    We recognize that Hazuri is a criminal case, as are the vast majority of
    published decisions on readbacks in Florida. We also recognize that readbacks in
    criminal cases are expressly regulated by rule 3.410 of the Florida Rules of Criminal
    Procedure, see 
    Hazuri, 91 So. 3d at 844
    , to which the civil rules contain no analog. At
    the time Hazuri was decided, rule 3.410 contained a one-sentence, discretion-conferring
    provision that a trial court "may" read back trial testimony to a jury.6 Fla. R. Crim. P.
    6
    The criminal rule has since been amended to regulate a trial court's
    communication with a jury concerning readbacks in more detail and in a manner
    consistent with Hazuri. See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.410 (2017). Although adoption of a
    - 12 -
    3.410 (2012); see also Avila v. State, 
    781 So. 2d 413
    , 415 (Fla. 4th DCA 2001) (holding
    that rule 3.410 confers "wide latitude in the area of the reading of testimony to the jury"),
    approved by 
    Hazuri, 91 So. 3d at 847
    .
    Those distinctions do not, however, mean that Hazuri should not apply in
    civil cases. Although no rule of procedure governs readbacks in the civil context, a trial
    judge in a civil case must, to carry out his or her responsibility to order and facilitate the
    jury's deliberations, enjoy a similar discretion about readbacks to that given a trial judge
    in a criminal case under rule 3.410. See Broward Cty. Sch. Bd. v. Ruiz, 
    493 So. 2d 474
    ,
    479-80 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986) (noting that no rule of civil procedure governs readbacks
    but analogizing to rule 3.410); see also Fla. Std. Jury Instr. (Civ.) 801.2, note 1 ("In civil
    cases, the decision to allow read-back of testimony lies within the sound discretion of
    the trial court."). As such, our analysis of a trial court's readback decisions in a civil
    case starts in the same place as it would in a criminal case: the trial court's ability to
    permit or reject a request for a readback in its discretion based on the facts and
    circumstances of the case.
    Moreover, in deciding to regulate what a trial judge should and should not
    say about the jury's ability to ask the trial judge to allow a readback, Hazuri relied on
    similar civil rule to address readbacks was contemplated, no changes to the civil rules
    were made; instead, a standard jury instruction in civil cases to govern the discretion
    afforded a trial court when a jury requests a readback was adopted. In re Amendments
    to the Fla. Rules of Civil Procedure, 
    967 So. 2d 178
    , 183 (Fla. 2007). Following Hazuri,
    the standard civil readback instruction, Fla. Std. Jury Instr. (Civ.) 801.2, which contains
    an express statement for the trial court to use in addressing jury requests for readbacks,
    was amended to include a note to reflect some limits on the trial court's discretion
    similar to those in the criminal context. In re Standard Jury Instructions in Civil Cases-
    Report No. 12-02, 
    115 So. 3d 208
    , 209 (Fla. 2013). Although the trial court
    acknowledged that this standard instruction existed, it did not employ it in responding to
    the jury note in this case.
    - 13 -
    considerations that are also present in the civil context. In particular, the court
    emphasized the jury's constitutional provenance and its centrality in determining facts
    when they are the subject of dispute. 
    Hazuri, 91 So. 3d at 845
    . Both considerations are
    implicated in civil cases as well. See amend. VIII, U.S. Const.; art. I, § 22, Fla. Const.
    A jury in a civil case is thus no more able to "properly fulfill its constitutionally mandated
    role if it cannot recall or is confused about the testimony presented," see Hazuri, 
    91 So. 3d
    at 845, than a jury in a criminal case is. Because Hazuri's rules concerning the
    possibility of a readback when transcripts are requested seek to ameliorate that
    confusion and permit the jury to perform its core function as a trier of fact, we see no
    reason why those rules should not be applied in civil cases as well.
    In this case, the trial court's response to the jury note seeking a transcript
    of Dennis Duignan's testimony, at a minimum, violated Hazuri's rule that a trial court
    should not use language that would mislead a jury into believing that a readback is
    prohibited. To be sure, the trial court did not explicitly say that a readback was
    prohibited; indeed, it acknowledged that a readback was "not impossible." But whether
    the trial court did or did not say that a readback was prohibited is not the question
    Hazuri asks. The question is whether what the trial court did say "would mislead" a jury
    into believing that a readback was prohibited. 
    Hazuri, 91 So. 3d at 846
    ; see also Roper
    v. State, 
    608 So. 2d 533
    , 535 (Fla. 5th DCA 1992) (finding error where "the trial judge's
    response to the jury's question may well have led the jury to conclude" that a readback
    was prohibited), approved by 
    Hazuri, 91 So. 3d at 847
    . The focus, then, is on what the
    likely effect of the trial court's statements on a reasonable jury might have been. Here,
    the answer is that a reasonable jury would have thought a readback prohibited.
    - 14 -
    Four facets of the trial court's response to the jury note inform that
    conclusion. First, the trial court advised the jury that readbacks, although "not
    impossible," are "not generally done." Second, it told the jury that the reason readbacks
    are "not generally done" is to prevent any witness's testimony from having undue
    influence by getting more attention than any other witness's testimony. Third, the trial
    court never told the jury that it had the option to ask for a readback; in other words,
    although the trial court said that readbacks are "not impossible," the jury was never told
    that it had the option to make that which was "not impossible" possible by asking for it.
    And finally, the court instructed the jury to rely on its "collective recollection" of all of the
    testimony in the case because of the "magic that happens" when a jury does so.
    It takes no feat of imagination to see how this response might lead
    reasonable lay jurors to think that asking for a readback would be a fool's errand. In
    substance, the trial court communicated to them that a readback was something
    extraordinary, that it was extraordinary because it gave the witness whose testimony
    was read back undue influence, and that the jurors instead should rely on their
    collective recollection of the testimony. The trial court's remarks, combined with its
    silence on the jury's right to at least ask for the testimony to be read back, in essence
    and effect, informed the jurors "that their only recourse was to rely upon their 'collective
    recollections and remembrances' as to" Dennis Duignan's testimony because
    transcripts were unavailable and a readback would not be forthcoming. See 
    Roper, 608 So. 2d at 535
    . That was error. See 
    Avila, 781 So. 2d at 416
    (reversing where the trial
    judge's response to transcript request "may have confused the jury as to whether a
    readback of testimony was permissible"); Biscardi v. State, 
    511 So. 2d 575
    , 581 (Fla.
    - 15 -
    4th DCA 1987) (reversing where "the judge's words may reasonably have conveyed to
    the jurors that to ask for . . . rereading of testimony would be futile"), approved by
    
    Hazuri, 91 So. 3d at 847
    . Based on the trial court's stated concern about reading back
    Dennis Duignan's testimony, this appears to have been the result its instruction was
    calculated to produce.
    The Estate argues that a Hazuri-type analysis is inapplicable in this case
    because Hazuri deals with a trial court's response to a jury's request to see a transcript
    of trial testimony, and the jury here sought only a transcript of Dennis Duignan's
    deposition testimony. That distinction might be material in other cases—we need not
    discuss it—but it is not in this one. Here, Dennis Duignan's deposition testimony was
    his trial testimony. It was read by the lawyers to the jury as substantive evidence at the
    trial. When deposition testimony is presented in this way, it is presented "as though the
    witness was present and testifying" in person at the trial. Castaneda v. Redlands
    Christian Migrant Ass'n, 
    884 So. 2d 1087
    , 1090 (Fla. 4th DCA 2004); see also Fla. R.
    Civ. P. 1.330(a) (stating that, where authorized by this rule, a deposition may be used
    "so far as [it is] admissible under the rules of evidence applied as though the witness
    were then present and testifying").
    Because Dennis Duignan's deposition testimony was presented to the jury
    as his trial testimony, the jury's request for his deposition transcript should have been
    interpreted as a request for the transcript of the deposition testimony that was read
    aloud at trial.7 See 
    Hazuri, 91 So. 3d at 845
    (explaining that because jurors are
    7
    The cases upon which the Estate relies are not applicable because none
    involved consideration of a jury's request to examine transcripts of deposition testimony
    read aloud to the jury during trial as substantive evidence. See Adams v. State, 122 So.
    - 16 -
    laypersons, a court should liberally construe a request for transcripts, "especially when
    the intent of the jury[] . . . is clear"). Indeed, the record in this case reflects that this is
    precisely how the trial court, the tobacco companies' counsel, and the Estate's counsel
    interpreted the request at the time it was made. The rules announced in Hazuri apply to
    this case.
    The Estate also argues that even if the trial court was mistaken in its
    response to the jury note, any error was harmless. Trial court error is regarded as
    harmless when "the beneficiary of the error proves that there is no reasonable
    possibility that the error contributed to the verdict." Special v. W. Boca Med. Ctr., 
    160 So. 3d 1251
    , 1256-57 (Fla. 2014).
    The inferences PM and Reynolds sought to draw from Dennis Duignan's
    testimony—inferences the testimony reasonably, although not exclusively, supports—
    were that Douglas Duignan knew early on that cigarettes caused cancer and other
    diseases and that he continued smoking notwithstanding this knowledge, not because
    he was addicted but because he did not intend to quit smoking. These inferences were
    3d 976, 978-80 (Fla. 2d DCA 2013) (holding, without discussing whether the depositions
    were read at trial or the distinction between deposition and trial testimony, that the trial
    court's failure to inform the jury of the possibility of a readback in response to a request
    for "all the depositions" and "transcripts of all the testimony" was not remediable on
    appeal in the absence of a contemporaneous objection in the trial court); Bannister v.
    State, 
    132 So. 3d 267
    , 278-80 (Fla. 4th DCA 2014) (holding that where a jury requested
    the depositions in a case where trial witnesses read from them during parts of their live
    testimony, "the jury was not requesting a read-back of the witness's testimony, but
    rather hard copies of the depositions" themselves); Delestre v. State, 
    103 So. 3d 1026
    ,
    1027-28 (Fla. 5th DCA 2012) (holding that the trial court's failure to inform the jury of the
    possibility of a readback in response to a request for "all the testimony" was not
    fundamental error); see also Armstrong v. Dwyer, 
    155 F.3d 211
    , 214 (3d Cir. 1998)
    (involving circumstances where it was clear that "the jury sought transcripts of
    depositions, rather than transcripts of the deposition testimony read during trial or a
    readback of such testimony").
    - 17 -
    significant in this case because they bore directly on PM and Reynolds' argument that
    Douglas Duignan was not a member of the Engle class because this cancer was not
    caused by addiction, on their argument that Douglas Duignan was comparatively
    negligent by continuing to smoke even when he was aware of the risk of cancer and
    other disease, and on their argument that Douglas Duignan did not rely on any
    information about addiction or the health effects of smoking that the tobacco companies
    fraudulently concealed. The Estate and PM and Reynolds addressed Dennis Duignan's
    testimony in opening statements and again in closing arguments. The fact that the jury
    asked for a transcript of his testimony suggests that it may have found it significant as
    well. Under these circumstances, there is at least a reasonable possibility that had the
    jury been permitted to ask for a readback of Dennis Duignan's testimony, it might have
    resolved one or more of the determinative issues in the case differently than it ultimately
    did. See, e.g., Barrow, 
    91 So. 3d
    at 835 (concluding that trial court's use of language
    that may have misled the jury into believing readbacks were prohibited was harmful
    where the facts showed that "a review of the testimonies could have been most helpful
    to the jury"); 
    Roper, 608 So. 2d at 536
    (holding that, where there were discrepancies
    between the testimony requested and other testimony in the case, "the trial court's
    refusal to even consider the reading of this crucial cross-examination" was not
    harmless).
    The trial court abused its discretion in addressing the jury's request for
    Dennis Duignan's deposition, and the Estate has not met the burden to show that error
    was harmless. Accordingly, we must reverse and remand for a new trial. In light of this
    result, we need not further address PM and Reynolds' argument that the trial court also
    - 18 -
    improperly commented on the evidence in its response to the jury's note. We do,
    however, address one other issue raised on appeal because it relates to a matter that
    rests within the scope of our remand and therefore requires our consideration.
    The Trial Court's Instruction on Reliance
    PM and Reynolds also argue that the trial court erred in instructing the jury
    on the reliance elements in the claims for fraud by concealment and conspiracy
    because it failed to tell the jury that Douglas Duignan was required to have relied on "a
    statement" by PM or Reynolds in order for the Estate to prevail. We review a trial
    court's decision to give or withhold a jury instruction for abuse of discretion, ITD Indus.,
    Inc. v. Bus. Res. Grp., 
    779 So. 2d 532
    , 543 (Fla. 2d DCA 2000), but will find such an
    abuse of discretion and reverse when an instruction is misleading and may have caused
    the jury to reach a result it otherwise would not have reached, Citizens Prop. Ins. Corp.
    v. Salkey, 
    190 So. 3d 1092
    , 1095 (Fla. 2d DCA 2016), quashed on other grounds, No.
    SC16-784, 
    2017 WL 2709776
    , at *1 (Fla. June 23, 2017). While we do not read the
    reliance requirement as narrowly as PM and Reynolds do—we do not think it
    categorically requires reliance on "a statement"—the instruction in this case was an
    abuse of discretion because it inaccurately told the jury to determine whether Douglas
    Duignan generally relied on PM and Reynolds to disclose material facts rather than
    telling the jury to determine whether he relied on a misapprehension concerning a
    material fact that PM and Reynolds concealed from him.
    Our analysis begins with what the Engle Phase I findings conclusively
    established in this case. As concerns fraud by concealment, they established that PM
    and Reynolds "concealed or omitted material information not otherwise known or
    - 19 -
    available knowing that the material was false or misleading or failed to disclose a
    material fact concerning the health effects or addictive nature of smoking cigarettes."
    See 
    Engle, 945 So. 2d at 1257
    n.4, 1277. For the conspiracy claims, they established
    that PM and Reynolds "agreed to conceal or omit information regarding the health
    effects of cigarettes or their addictive nature with the intention that smokers and the
    public would rely on this information to their detriment." 
    Id. The fact
    that the concealment or omission of material information with the
    intention that it would be relied on was a given, however, does not mean that it caused
    Douglas Duignan any harm unless he is shown actually to have relied on it. In a claim
    founded in fraud, the link between a defendant's conduct and the plaintiff's harm is
    supplied in part by the requirement that the plaintiff detrimentally and reasonably relied
    on something the defendant said or failed to say. See Humana Inc. v. Castillo, 
    728 So. 2d
    261, 265 (Fla. 2d DCA 1999) ("If a plaintiff claims to be misled, but cannot
    demonstrate a causal connection between the defendant's conduct and the plaintiff's
    misapprehension, the plaintiff cannot recover."); see also 
    Calloway, 201 So. 3d at 766
    ("Florida's written opinions have consistently included detrimental reliance as an
    element in fraudulent concealment instructions."). Thus, it is settled that "Engle-
    progeny plaintiffs must . . . prove detrimental reliance in order to prevail" on claims for
    fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal. Hess v. Philip Morris
    USA, Inc., 
    175 So. 3d 687
    , 698 (Fla. 2015).
    PM and Reynolds say that an Engle progeny plaintiff must show his
    reliance on a direct statement by a defendant (in the case of fraudulent concealment) or
    a member of the conspiracy (in the case of conspiracy), but that understanding of
    - 20 -
    reliance is artificially narrow. It is true that fraud claims are commonly based on an
    affirmative statement by the defendant and that in such circumstances the law speaks
    of reliance on a statement or a representation. See, e.g., Butler v. Yusem, 
    44 So. 3d 102
    , 105 (Fla. 2010) (discussing reliance on such representations). But the cases' use
    of the formulation "detrimental reliance on a statement" or something similar should not
    obscure the nature of the inquiry: when we ask about detrimental reliance, we are
    asking whether the plaintiff would have behaved in the same way had he known the true
    facts. See, e.g., Lance v. Wade, 
    457 So. 2d 1008
    , 1011 (Fla. 1984) (holding that
    individual issues of reliance generally preclude fraud class actions because "[w]hat one
    purchaser may rely on in entering into a contract may not be material to another
    purchaser"), distinguished on other grounds in KPMG Peat Marwick LLP v. Barner, 
    799 So. 2d 308
    , 309 (Fla. 2d DCA 2001). Depending on the facts presented in a claim
    involving reliance, a statement is not the only way in which the claimant may prove it.
    Consider a fraud claim based on an affirmative misrepresentation. A
    seller of a car tells a buyer that "this car has never been in an accident." In fact, the car
    has been in five of them. The seller's statement is false. Doubtless, a trial court would
    properly instruct a jury to determine whether the plaintiff relied on a statement in
    deciding to buy the car. See, e.g., Fla. Std. Jury Instr. (Civ.) 409.7. But it is the fact that
    statement conveys—that the car had never been in an accident—that really mattered to
    the buyer. An instruction that the buyer must prove reliance on a statement is correct
    because the statement conveys the fact the buyer misapprehended.
    In cases involving concealment or omission, however, the link between a
    statement by the defendant and the plaintiff's misapprehension may be less direct.
    - 21 -
    Suppose our car seller assured the buyer that "this car's transmission has always
    worked fine." Suppose also that the statement was literally true but failed to note that
    the seller had just discovered a defect in the transmission that will become a serious
    problem within a year. Although the seller's statement was true, the plaintiff might still
    claim fraud on the theory that having chosen to speak about the condition of the
    transmission, the seller had a duty to disclose the transmission defect that had not yet
    manifested itself to the buyer. See, e.g., ZC Ins. Co. v. Brooks, 
    847 So. 2d 547
    , 551
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2003) ("Florida law recognizes that fraud can occur by omission[] and
    places a duty on one who undertakes to disclose material information to disclose that
    information fully."); Mukamal v. Gen. Elec. Capital Corp. (In re Palm Beach Fin.
    Partners, L.P.), 
    517 B.R. 310
    , 335 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. 2013) ("Fraudulent concealment is
    common law fraud by means of actively concealing a material fact in the fact [sic] of a
    duty to disclose that fact to the plaintiff."). In this circumstance, the statement itself only
    expressed the material fact that the transmission had worked fine in the past—a
    historical fact that may not have mattered to the buyer and, even if it did, cannot have
    operated to the buyer's detriment because it was true. The buyer here was not misled
    by the content of a statement; he was misled regarding an unstated truth the seller
    became obligated to disclose by virtue of having decided to speak. A jury instruction
    that the buyer must have detrimentally relied on the seller's statement would be
    appropriate in this circumstance because the seller's statement triggered his disclosure
    obligation. But it would be more precise to ask whether he relied on a misapprehension
    as to the fact concealed or omitted.
    - 22 -
    And then, of course, there can be concealment or omission with no
    statement at all, such as when the car's seller, knowing the trunk is severely rusted
    inside, parks the car so as to prevent the buyer from opening it fully and finding the
    damage. See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Torts § 550, cmt. a (Am. Law. Inst. 2016)
    (providing similar example of fraudulent concealment); see also Joiner v. McCullers, 
    28 So. 2d 823
    , 824-25 (Fla. 1947) (explaining that "[t]he rule that fraud cannot be
    predicated of a failure to disclose facts . . . does not apply where a party[,] in addition to
    non-disclosure[,] uses any artifice to throw the other party off his guard" or on "any . . .
    act . . . which tends affirmatively to a suppression of the truth" (quoting 12 Ruling Case
    Law, Fraud and Deceit § 80, 319-20 (William M. McKinney & Burdette A. Rich, eds.
    (1916), a now out-of-print legal treatise). Alternatively, the seller stands in a fiduciary
    relationship to the buyer and, although obligated by that relationship to make disclosure
    of the rusted trunk, fails to do so. See TransPetrol, Ltd. v. Radulovic, 
    764 So. 2d 878
    ,
    880 (Fla. 4th DCA 2000) (holding that a duty of disclosure exists where there is a
    fiduciary or other relationship of trust and confidence between plaintiff and defendant
    (quoting State v. Mark Marks, P.A., 
    654 So. 2d 1184
    , 1189 (Fla. 4th DCA 1995))). In
    either circumstance, it would be inaccurate to instruct a jury to look for reliance on a
    statement to fulfill the obligation of proof because no statement was made. The buyer's
    reliance, if any, was on the mistaken belief that there was nothing wrong with the trunk.
    In this circumstance, it would be incorrect to instruct the jury that it had to find reliance
    on a statement because there was not one on which the buyer could rely.
    The point of these hypotheticals is not to catalog every variation of the
    facts upon which a reliance instruction might be given. It is to show that whether an
    - 23 -
    instruction that a jury must find reliance on "a statement" is necessary or proper will
    depend on the nature of the claims presented and the evidence at trial. See 
    Calloway, 201 So. 3d at 766
    (holding, in an Engle progeny case, that "[t]he instruction need not
    include reliance on 'a statement' unless the facts of the case warrant it"). It also is to
    show that when the facts involve concealment or omission, an instruction requiring
    detrimental reliance on a misapprehension as to the fact concealed or omitted will
    usually accurately inform the jury of what it must find with respect to the element of
    detrimental reliance essential to that claim. That is the case here.
    PM and Reynolds argue, however, that reliance on "a statement" is
    necessary in an Engle progeny case because the concealment claim in the original
    Engle trial was predicated on statements by the tobacco company defendants in that
    case. They point to language in the Engle jury instructions showing that the
    concealment claim hinged on statements that the Engle plaintiffs contended required
    the tobacco companies to make complete disclosure of what they knew about the health
    consequences of smoking and to arguments made by Engle class counsel to similar
    effect. Assuming for argument's sake that PM and Reynolds have accurately construed
    the concealment claim litigated in the Engle trial—a matter we need not decide—that
    still would not command a hard-and-fast rule that an instruction in an Engle progeny
    case must include a requirement that the plaintiff detrimentally relied on "a statement."
    The excerpts of the Engle trial to which PM and Reynolds point depict a
    theory of concealment based on circumstances in which a defendant has spoken on a
    subject—i.e., has made a statement about it—and thereby became obligated to make a
    fuller disclosure and, by failing to do so, concealed or omitted material facts. As
    - 24 -
    described above, it is at least equally accurate to say that the plaintiff's reliance must be
    on a misapprehension as to the material facts or information concealed or omitted by
    the defendant, rather than on any specific statement it made.
    This is consistent with the way Florida courts have evaluated the legal
    sufficiency of a plaintiff's evidence of reliance in the context of the fraudulent
    concealment and conspiracy claims in an Engle progeny case. An Engle plaintiff's proof
    in such cases typically includes, as it did in this case, extensive evidence of the tobacco
    company defendants' participation in a decades-long pervasive advertising campaign
    and creation of a false controversy about the addictive nature and health effects of
    cigarettes that operated to conceal the adverse consequences of smoking from
    cigarette consumers. In such circumstances, the courts have refused to hold that an
    Engle progeny plaintiff must identify specific statements that he read or heard and relied
    upon in making a decision regarding cigarette smoking in order to prevail. See Philip
    Morris USA, Inc. v. Kayton, 
    104 So. 3d 1145
    , 1149 (Fla. 4th DCA 2012), quashed on
    other grounds, 41 Fla. L. Weekly S113 (Fla. Feb. 1, 2016) (table decision); R.J.
    Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. Martin, 
    53 So. 3d 1060
    , 1069-70 (Fla. 1st DCA 2010). The
    reason is that the very pervasiveness of the advertising campaign and false controversy
    and uniqueness of the facts concealed or omitted permits an Engle progeny jury to infer
    reliance. See Philip Morris USA, Inc. v. Hallgren, 
    124 So. 3d 350
    , 353 (Fla. 2d DCA
    2013) (discussing 
    Martin, 53 So. 3d at 1069-70
    ). But see Berger v. Phillip Morris USA,
    Inc., 
    101 F. Supp. 3d 1228
    , 1238-39 (M.D. Fla. 2015) (criticizing reasoning of these
    cases and predicting that the Florida Supreme Court will not follow them), appeal filed,
    
    101 F. Supp. 3d 1228
    (11th Cir. Jan. 5, 2016). This is not to say that a tobacco
    - 25 -
    company cannot show otherwise. Cf. Evers v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 
    195 So. 3d 1139
    , 1141 (Fla. 2d DCA 2015) (reversing entry of a directed verdict and rejecting
    defendant's sufficiency challenge on reliance element where "the tobacco company has
    pointed to no evidence that Ms. Loyd was aware that the nicotine in cigarettes was
    addictive, nor has it conclusively demonstrated that despite some awareness on Ms.
    Loyd's part that smoking could cause health problems, that she was not reassured by
    the controversy the tobacco companies generated to keep people smoking"). But the
    cases do seem to establish that reliance on "a statement" is not required to prevail in an
    Engle progeny case.
    PM and Reynolds also argue that without an instruction that requires the
    plaintiff to have relied on a statement, they risk being held liable for a pure
    nondisclosure unaccompanied by a misleading statement, misleading conduct, or duty
    to disclose. They correctly observe that silence, unaccompanied by a duty to disclose,
    is not actionable as fraud. See 
    TransPetrol, 764 So. 2d at 879-80
    . And it is logically
    true that if a jury were to look solely at the Engle Phase I finding of "omissions" and a
    reliance instruction that allowed it to find fraud if the plaintiff relied on the fact omitted,
    then there is at least a theoretical possibility that PM or Reynolds could be held liable in
    fraud for pure silence about the health effects or addictive properties of cigarettes.8 But
    to the extent this is a problem, it is not a problem for the element of reliance to solve.
    8
    Whether this logical possibility extends beyond theory to a real-world
    application is an open question that we need not address. The Estate argues that this
    possibility is wholly theoretical because the proof in this case includes evidence of
    decades-long advertising campaigns and the creation of a false controversy over the
    effect of smoking that by its nature included statements rendered misleading by the
    concealment or omission of material facts.
    - 26 -
    The question of whether a defendant has a duty to make a disclosure is
    legally and factually distinct from the question of whether a plaintiff relied on a
    nondisclosure. The question of duty to disclose hinges on whether the defendant has
    done something toward the plaintiff or occupies a status with respect to the plaintiff that
    obligates the defendant to make a disclosure. See, e.g., Metcalf v. Johnson, 
    113 So. 2d 864
    , 868 (Fla. 2d DCA 1959) ("Where persons sustain towards another a relation of
    trust and confidence, their silence when they ought to speak, or their failure to disclose
    what they ought to disclose, is as much a fraud in law as an actual affirmative false
    representation."). The question of reliance, in contrast, asks whether a
    misapprehension as to the undisclosed fact took on significance in the mind of the
    plaintiff and influenced his decision-making with respect to the matter at issue to his
    detriment. See, e.g., Raymond, James & Assocs., Inc. v. Zumstorchen Inv., Ltd., 
    488 So. 2d 843
    , 845-46 (Fla. 2d DCA 1986) (holding that plaintiff satisfactorily alleged
    detrimental reliance where it alleged that it entered into the transaction based on its
    belief in the defendants' representations). In other words, reliance is not focused on the
    defendant's duty but rather on the plaintiff's reaction to a misstated, concealed, or
    omitted fact.
    PM and Reynolds' concern about the absence of the words "a statement"
    from the jury instructions is actually linked to the question of duty, not the question of
    reliance. See, e.g., Marriott Int'l, Inc. v. Am. Bridge Bahamas, Ltd., 
    193 So. 3d 902
    , 908
    (Fla. 3d DCA 2015) ("A duty to disclose may arise where a party undertakes to disclose
    certain facts, such that the party must then disclose the entire truth known to him. Such
    a claim, however, must be supported by some evidence of a statement that would
    - 27 -
    trigger the further duty to disclose all known material facts." (emphasis added) (citation
    omitted)). The risk of PM's or Reynolds' being held liable for an omission in the
    absence of a duty to disclose is thus not the result of a failure to require reliance on a
    statement but rather is the result of one of two possible conditions: (1) that the Phase I
    Engle findings necessarily embrace a disclosure obligation that cannot be relitigated in
    every Engle progeny case or (2) that a jury instruction directed to the question of an
    Engle defendant's disclosure obligations may be proper if requested and implicated by
    the evidence in the case. We express no opinion on either possibility because they are
    not before us. We hold only that the element of reliance cannot do the work that PM
    and Reynolds ask of it here.
    Having determined that a special jury instruction demanding reliance on "a
    statement" was not required in this case, we consider the special instruction the trial
    court gave—namely, that the jury could find the reliance element satisfied if the
    evidence showed that Douglas Duignan "reasonably relied to his detriment that [PM and
    Reynolds] would not conceal or omit disclosure of such material information." This
    instruction was both inaccurate and misleading. It in essence told the jury that it could
    find reliance if it found that Douglas Duignan generally relied on the tobacco companies
    to disclose all material information, without requiring it to find that the material
    information the tobacco companies concealed or omitted was in fact important to his
    decisions to begin or continue smoking. Because the very purpose of the reliance
    requirement is to determine whether the plaintiff acted differently because of PM's or
    Reynolds' concealment or omission of facts, this instruction was misleading.
    - 28 -
    It also may have made a difference to the outcome. As described above,
    the notion that Douglas Duignan started or continued smoking because he enjoyed
    smoking and not because of anything PM or Reynolds said or failed to say was a key
    element of their defense. A proper instruction—one that required reliance on either a
    statement or on a misapprehension as to a concealed or omitted fact—would have
    required the jury to consider that possibility and determine whether the tobacco
    companies were correct as to the reasons for Douglas Duignan's actions. The
    instruction the trial court gave, in contrast, allowed the jury to ignore this aspect of PM
    and Reynolds' defense because, if Douglas Duignan's general reliance on them to
    disclose everything is sufficient to prove reliance, there was no reason for the jury to
    consider whether any particular undisclosed fact would have made a difference to his
    decisions about smoking. Accordingly, the error in these instructions might reasonably
    have misled the jury and constitutes reversible error. See, e.g., Fla. Power & Light Co.
    v. McCollum, 
    140 So. 2d 569
    , 569 (Fla. 1962) (concluding that the proper "inquiry is
    whether the jury might reasonably have been misled" and concluding that such
    constitutes a miscarriage of justice under the civil harmless error statute in effect at the
    time); Gerard v. Kenegson, 
    151 So. 2d 26
    , 28 (Fla. 2d DCA 1963) ("In view of the fact
    that instruction . . . was erroneous[,] and since the instruction can be reasonably
    calculated to confuse and mislead the jury, the giving of the instruction was error.");
    Veliz v. Am. Hosp., Inc., 
    414 So. 2d 226
    , 228 (Fla. 3d DCA 1982) ("An instruction which
    tends to confuse rather than enlighten the jury is cause for reversal if it may have misled
    the jury and caused them to arrive at a conclusion that otherwise they may not have
    reached."); see also § 59.041, Fla. Stat. (2015) (setting forth the civil harmless error
    - 29 -
    standard for appellate review and containing the same miscarriage of justice language
    as that cited in Florida Power & Light).
    At oral argument, the Estate contended that this defect in the reliance
    instruction was harmless because the trial court, at PM and Reynolds' request, also
    instructed the jury on materiality, telling it that "material information is that which is of
    such importance that it would have made a difference in Douglas Duignan's actions if it
    had been disclosed."9 Thus, according to the Estate, the materiality instruction
    effectively required the jury to answer the question that the reliance instruction should
    have asked. We disagree. Neither the jury instructions nor the verdict form required
    the jury to determine materiality. On the contrary, the jury was instructed to take
    materiality as a given. It was told that the Engle Phase I findings conclusively
    9
    This instruction appears to be based on a standard instruction in civil
    cases. See Fla. Std. Jury Instr. (Civ.) 409.5 ("A material fact is one that is of such
    importance that (claimant) would not have [entered into the transaction] [acted], but for
    the false statement."). There may be reason to question whether this standard
    instruction is legally correct. Materiality is generally evaluated under an objective test—
    inquiring whether a misrepresented or omitted fact would have taken on significance in
    the mind of a reasonable person. See Moustafa v. Omega Ins. Co., 
    201 So. 3d 710
    ,
    715 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016) (holding that materiality, as used in statute regarding false
    representations in an insurance policy application, is to be determined under an
    objective test); Silverman v. Pitterman, 
    574 So. 2d 275
    , 276 (Fla. 3d DCA 1991) ("A
    material fact is generally defined as one to which a reasonable person would attach
    importance in determining a choice of action."); see also Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 
    485 U.S. 224
    , 240 (1988) (holding, under federal securities fraud statute, that "materiality
    depends on the significance the reasonable investor would place on the withheld or
    misrepresented information"); Dan B. Dobbs, The Law of Torts § 476 at 1363 (West
    2001) ("Representations are material if a reasonable person would want to consider the
    fact represented in determining whether to enter the transaction in question, and also if
    a reasonable person would not care about the fact represented but the plaintiff attaches
    her own idiosyncratic importance to it and the defendant knows it."). But see Atl. Nat'l
    Bank of Fla. v. Vest, 
    480 So. 2d 1328
    , 1332 (Fla. 2d DCA 1985) ("A fact is material if,
    but for the alleged nondisclosure or misrepresentation, the complaining party would not
    have entered into the transaction.").
    - 30 -
    established that PM and Reynolds concealed or omitted material information related to
    the health effects and addictive properties of cigarettes, and the trial court's specific
    instructions on the fraudulent concealment and conspiracy claims assumed materiality
    rather than putting it to the jury to decide. Simply put, because the jury was told both
    expressly and by implication to assume materiality rather than to decide it, the Estate
    cannot establish a reasonable probability that the instructional error did not affect the
    verdict on the fraud by concealment and conspiracy claims. See 
    Special, 160 So. 3d at 1256-57
    . The instructional error here was not harmless.
    At a minimum, the error would require a new trial on the Estate's claims for
    fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal. The parties disagree,
    however, about whether it also requires a new trial with respect to punitive damages.
    While the error itself is one worthy of articulation so that it is not repeated in the second
    trial, we need not reach a determination on what the scope of that error alone would be
    on remand because we reverse and remand for a new trial on all issues based on the
    trial court's readback instruction.
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the final judgment is reversed and this case is
    remanded for a new trial. We certify conflict with Schoeff, Calloway, McKeever, and
    Grossman with respect to the comparative fault issue in this case.
    Reversed and remanded; conflict certified.
    KELLY and BLACK, JJ., Concur.
    - 31 -