Wayne Bitgood v. Gordon Greene Post Number 27 of the American Legion ( 2015 )


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  •                                                             Supreme Court
    No. 2013-352-Appeal.
    (WC 10-613)
    Wayne Bitgood                   :
    v.                       :
    Gordon Greene Post Number 27 of the       :
    American Legion.
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before
    publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to
    notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250
    Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone 222-
    3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2013-352-Appeal.
    (WC 10-613)
    Wayne Bitgood                    :
    v.                        :
    Gordon Greene Post Number 27 of the          :
    American Legion.
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    OPINION
    Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court.         A barroom altercation led to a jury verdict
    awarding $448,130 in damages to the plaintiff, Wayne Bitgood, on his negligence claim against
    Gordon Greene Post Number 27 of the American Legion (Post 27 or defendant). The jury also
    determined that the plaintiff’s own negligence was a proximate cause of his injuries and
    attributed twenty percent of the overall negligence to him. Post 27 now appeals from the
    Superior Court judgment, contending that the trial justice erred in denying its motion for a new
    trial and/or remittitur. This case came before the Supreme Court pursuant to an order directing
    the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be
    summarily decided. After considering the parties’ written and oral submissions and reviewing
    the record, we conclude that cause has not been shown and that this case may be decided without
    further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of
    the Superior Court.
    -1-
    I
    Facts and Travel
    On the evening of February 4, 2009, Bitgood and Ryan Gardiner were patrons at the bar
    on defendant’s premises. Two physical altercations occurred between the men; the first inside
    the bar, and the second in defendant’s parking lot approximately ten to fifteen minutes later. The
    plaintiff sustained serious injuries, requiring a two-week stay in the hospital and two months at
    home to recover. In April 2010, plaintiff filed a complaint in the Providence County Superior
    Court, alleging that his injuries resulted from defendant’s negligence. In its answer, defendant
    claimed comparative negligence and improper venue among various affirmative defenses.
    Pursuant to defendant’s motion to change venue, the case was transferred to Washington County
    in July 2010. The case was tried before a jury in the Washington County Superior Court in May
    2013.
    While there was no dispute that Gardiner assaulted plaintiff twice within a fifteen-minute
    period, none of the trial witnesses relayed why or how the altercations began. The plaintiff
    testified that he had no memory of the incident. His last memory of the evening was driving his
    truck to the end of his driveway on his way to Post 27 to pick up a bartender who needed a ride
    home. The plaintiff stated that he had diabetes, and that if his blood sugar dropped too low “[he
    is] like in a blackout. [He] can still function but [he does not] know what [he is] doing.” Daniel
    Baruti, the Hopkinton Police Department lieutenant who oversaw the investigation into the
    incident, testified that the investigation had not revealed how the first incident started.
    -2-
    Robin McCoombs, the bartender on duty the night of the incident, was the only trial
    witness other than plaintiff who was present in the barroom during the first altercation. 1 She
    testified that she had observed Gardiner that evening; she described him as belligerent,
    obnoxious, vulgar, antagonizing other patrons, and looking for a fight. McCoombs saw Gardiner
    repeatedly punch and kick plaintiff on the floor of the bar, but she did not see how the assault
    started because her back had been to plaintiff and Gardiner. McCoombs recalled, however, that,
    shortly before the first altercation began, plaintiff was seated at the bar and Gardiner walked past
    plaintiff on his way toward the door. From these observations and the location within the
    barroom of the first fracas, McCoombs inferred that plaintiff “had to walk” to the area of the
    “initial assault.”
    Jennifer Place’s deposition testimony was read into the record at trial.          She was
    defendant’s bar manager, and she testified that Gardiner was “known to have a black belt in
    karate and he’s known to get violent.” On the night of the incident, Place was in the hall outside
    the barroom when the first altercation occurred. She recalled that she went into the bar when she
    heard yelling, and there she saw Gardiner and plaintiff “in a scuffle on the floor.” Once the
    fighting was over, she watched Gardiner leave the premises and then she spoke with plaintiff.
    The plaintiff told Place that he was fine and was going to head home. Place stated that she was
    standing outside on the steps when Gardiner returned “about ten minutes” later. As soon as she
    realized that Gardiner had returned, she “yelled to the bartender to call the police” and then told
    Gardiner to get back in his truck. She said that Gardiner replied, “[H]e cut me, he’s a dead
    man.” Place testified that she did not see the second altercation because she went inside, but
    1
    McCoombs testified as an adverse witness; therefore much of her testimony on direct
    examination by plaintiff’s counsel consisted of responding “yes” or “no” to counsel’s leading
    questions, as well as acknowledging the accuracy of her prior deposition testimony.
    -3-
    that, after she saw Gardiner drive away, she observed plaintiff unconscious and bleeding. The
    police and rescue arrived minutes later.
    At trial, it was undisputed that no one had called the police either during or immediately
    after the first assault. McCoombs testified that she had not called the police because she had not
    believed that Gardiner would return. McCoombs also stated that plaintiff had not asked her to
    call the police and declined her offer to call an ambulance. She acknowledged, however, that she
    locked the door behind Gardiner after he left. Place testified at her deposition that she had not
    believed that the police needed to be called after the first altercation. James R. Taft, Sr., then a
    member of defendant’s executive board as finance officer and liaison between the bar manager
    and the executive board, was in defendant’s basement on February 4, 2009 for a meeting. Taft’s
    deposition, which was read into the record during trial, reflected that he went upstairs when he
    heard a “large commotion,” but that “it was relatively calm in the bar when [he] got up there,”
    and the police were not needed because “[t]o the best of [his] knowledge,” everything was under
    control at that point. Taft saw “no damage to the [premises], * * * nobody on the floor, and * * *
    nobody fighting in the building.”
    Sergeant Robert Kenyon, a police officer with the Hopkinton Police Department, testified
    that he was dispatched to Post 27 on the evening of the incident. He arrived less than two
    minutes after the police station received the call about the disturbance.         Sergeant Kenyon
    testified that, if he had been dispatched either during or immediately after the first altercation,
    then, based on his location at that time, he would have arrived at Post 27 in five to six minutes
    (i.e., prior to the second altercation).
    Several witnesses testified that defendant had a written policy in place for handling
    emergency situations. The policy in effect on the date of the incident directed its staff to call the
    -4-
    police when “a situation [got] out of control.” 2 A few months after the incident, defendant
    changed its policy regarding when its staff were to call the police. Place testified that the new
    policy directed staff to call the police “anytime there was even a verbal argument or * * * any
    physical altercation.” Michael Alger, who took over as Post 27’s commander four months after
    the incident, testified that he created this new policy after he took over as commander in part
    because “the town licensing board demanded it to be written * * * [and] required [Post 27] to
    have new guidelines.” The new policy also required bartenders to use a panic alarm whenever
    they believed a disturbance either might occur or was occurring; the signal from that alarm went
    directly to the Hopkinton Police Department.
    Baruti, who oversaw the investigation into the incident, expressed his opinions regarding
    the standards of care for maintaining the safety and security of patrons in a bar following a
    physical altercation, as well as the instructions provided to staff on handling physical altercations
    that occur on the premises. 3 He testified that, based on his twenty-three years of experience, the
    general standard of care “expected” by the law enforcement community was that police would be
    called during or after each physical altercation “to secure that particular scene and make it safe,
    not only for the patrons, but also for the people that you’re calling to the scene.” Baruti opined
    that defendant had not met this standard of care because, if the police had been called after the
    2
    The defendant’s Bar Management & Organizational Manual, section 10, paragraph 4 stated that
    “in the event a situation gets out of control, call 911 and request the local police. Next call the
    bar manager to inform of the situation.”
    3
    While plaintiff’s counsel laid an extensive foundation upon which Baruti could have been
    qualified to testify as an expert witness, the record does not reflect that Baruti was tendered to
    the court for approval to testify as an expert. The record does reflect, however, that Baruti
    provided expert opinion testimony without objection from defendant. In addition, in the trial
    justice’s ruling on defendant’s motion for a new trial and/or remittitur, she treated Baruti’s
    testimony as that of an expert in the area of public safety. At oral argument before this Court,
    plaintiff’s counsel suggested that discussions occurred off the record in which the parties agreed
    that Baruti would testify as an expert.
    -5-
    first altercation, then the second altercation would not have occurred. As to the standard of care
    for the policy and procedures that a bar should have had in place for bar staff confronted with a
    physical altercation between patrons, Baruti testified that the policy should have been to
    immediately report the event to the police. Baruti opined that defendant’s policy on February 4,
    2009 did not meet the standard of care because it allowed the bartenders to make subjective
    decisions about when a situation was out of control and therefore when to call the police.
    At the conclusion of all the testimony, plaintiff submitted several medical affidavits with
    records and bills attached. The plaintiff testified that he sustained injuries that included a
    “[l]acerated liver, broken back, damage to [his] right arm, gallbladder removed[,] * * * part of
    [his] bowel and intestine [removed], and * * * colon damage.” He further testified that he spent
    two weeks in the hospital, then two months at home recuperating. His mother, sister, and
    nephew took turns looking after his daily needs, and he visited a primary care physician once a
    month for two years. The plaintiff was admitted again to the hospital two years later on an
    emergency admission to remove a stitch that had been left inside his abdomen from one of the
    operations conducted immediately after the incident. The plaintiff testified that, during the
    eighteen years before his injuries, he did “all construction work, concrete, running equipment, all
    labor stuff,” either for “Triton Marine on the New London sub base” or at Cherenzia Excavation
    in Westerly. The plaintiff began “light duty” work on a part-time basis four months after the
    incident. His return to work was against his doctor’s recommendation, but plaintiff stated that he
    “had bills to pay, no money coming in.” The plaintiff “pretty much” resumed normal duties and
    full-time hours six months after the incident. At the end of the trial, plaintiff requested damages
    that included reimbursement for medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering.
    -6-
    The jury returned a verdict that found both parties negligent and attributed eighty percent
    of the negligence to defendant and twenty percent of the negligence to plaintiff. The jury
    awarded $448,130 to plaintiff, which represented the full amount plaintiff had requested. After
    reducing the award by twenty percent for plaintiff’s comparative negligence and adding statutory
    interest at the rate of twelve percent, the total amount awarded to plaintiff was $543,433.13. The
    defendant thereafter filed a motion for a new trial and/or remittitur (for a reapportionment of
    comparative negligence) pursuant to Rule 59 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. At
    a hearing on June 13, 2013, the trial justice denied the motion. The defendant timely appealed.
    II
    Standard of Review
    When a trial justice considers a motion for a new trial, she or he steps into the role of a
    juror, reviews the evidence in light of the instructions previously given to the jury, and exercises
    independent judgment regarding the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the evidence.
    Connor v. Schlemmer, 
    996 A.2d 98
    , 114 (R.I. 2010).
    “In carrying out the function of superjuror, the trial justice should
    adhere to the following principles: [t]he trial justice may accept
    some or all of the evidence. [He or she] may reject evidence that is
    impeached or contradicted by other positive testimony or
    circumstantial evidence. Or [he or she] may disregard testimony
    that contains inherent improbabilities or contradictions or which is
    totally at variance with undisputed physical facts or laws. [He or
    she] may also add to the evidence by drawing proper inferences.”
    Manning v. Bellafiore, 
    991 A.2d 399
    , 408 (R.I. 2010) (quoting
    Murray v. Bromley, 
    945 A.2d 330
    , 333 (R.I. 2008)).
    “The trial justice should allow the verdict to stand if he or she ‘determines that the
    evidence is evenly balanced or is such that reasonable minds, in considering that same evidence,
    could come to different conclusions * * *.’” Manning, 
    991 A.2d at 408
     (quoting Seddon v. Duke,
    
    884 A.2d 413
    , 413-14 (R.I. 2005) (mem.)). The trial justice sets aside a verdict “when [his or
    -7-
    her] judgment tells [him or her] that it is wrong because it fails to respond truly to the merits of
    the controversy and to administer substantial justice and is against the fair preponderance of the
    evidence.” Connor, 
    996 A.2d at 115
     (quoting Murray, 
    945 A.2d at 333
    ). In his or her decision,
    “the trial justice need not engage in an exhaustive review and analysis of all of the evidence and
    testimony presented at trial * * * [but] need only make reference to such facts disclosed by the
    testimony as have motivated his or her conclusion.” Bourdon’s, Inc. v. Ecin Industries, Inc., 
    704 A.2d 747
    , 758 (R.I. 1997) (quoting Kwarciak v. Star Market, 
    506 A.2d 545
    , 547 (R.I. 1986))
    (emphasis omitted).
    This Court gives “great weight” to a trial justice’s ruling on a motion for a new trial.
    Botelho v. Caster’s, Inc., 
    970 A.2d 541
    , 546 (R.I. 2009). This Court will affirm a trial justice’s
    decision on a motion for a new trial “as long as the trial justice conducts the appropriate analysis,
    does not overlook or misconceive material evidence, and is not otherwise clearly wrong.”
    Connor, 
    996 A.2d at 115
     (quoting Murray, 
    945 A.2d at 334
    ). We conduct a similar review of a
    trial justice’s decision on a motion for remittitur, and we determine whether he or she overlooked
    or misconceived material evidence. See Lennon v. Dacomed Corp., 
    901 A.2d 582
    , 590 (R.I.
    2006).
    III
    Discussion
    A
    Motion for a New Trial
    The defendant argues that the trial justice was clearly wrong to deny its motion for a new
    trial because the evidence was not evenly balanced. The defendant contends that the testimony
    regarding Gardiner’s reputation was outweighed by the testimony from McCoombs, Place, and
    -8-
    Taft that the police were not needed after the first altercation because the situation was under
    control. Since the altercation was over and Gardiner had left the premises, defendant argues, it
    did not breach its “duty to exercise reasonable care to protect [plaintiff] from reasonably
    foreseeable harm at the hands of Gardiner” by not calling the police. The defendant highlights
    the trial justice’s finding that McCoombs was credible and consistent in her testimony that she
    did not believe that either the first altercation was out of control or that a second one would
    occur.
    The plaintiff counters that, given the evidence on record regarding Gardiner’s reputation,
    “a reasonably prudent person would have called the police” immediately upon the first sign of an
    attack. The plaintiff also argues that the evidence presented regarding defendant’s change in
    policy also supported the jury’s verdict because the adoption of the stricter policy was evidence
    of defendant’s negligence.
    At the hearing on defendant’s motion, the trial justice articulated the standard of review
    for a new trial motion and then summarized the evidence presented at trial. The trial justice
    found that McCoombs, the only witness other than plaintiff who was both present in the barroom
    and who testified in person at trial, was “credible and unwavering in her testimony that she did
    not believe that the first altercation was out of control, or that there would be a second
    altercation.” The trial justice also commented, however, that McCoombs twice testified to
    locking the door after Gardiner left “to, quote, make sure that he did not come back in.” The trial
    justice highlighted the undisputed fact that defendant changed its emergency situation policy
    after the incident, and she commented that the jury was instructed that they could consider this
    subsequent remedial measure when deciding whether defendant breached its duty. The trial
    justice stated that the credible evidence established “not only that an altercation took place * * *
    -9-
    but that Gardiner was known to the staff as having a reputation of being violent, that he was
    acting obnoxious and belligerent and looking for a fight, that he set [plaintiff] as his target * * *.”
    The trial justice concluded that “[t]he credible evidence presented was so evenly balanced and
    such that different minds can naturally and fairly come to different conclusions on the
    defendant’s liability for negligence. Accordingly, this Court is required to deny the motion for a
    new trial.”
    Based on our review of the record, we are well satisfied that the trial justice engaged in
    the appropriate analysis of defendant’s motion, neither overlooked nor misconceived material
    evidence, and was not otherwise clearly wrong. When the evidence is evenly balanced, a jury
    verdict must stand. Manning, 
    991 A.2d at 408
    . We therefore affirm the denial of defendant’s
    motion for a new trial.
    B
    Alternate Motion for Remittitur
    The defendant also argues that the trial justice was clearly wrong when she denied its
    alternative motion for remittitur because this ruling “overlooked the inescapable conclusion that
    there could not have been a second altercation if the first altercation did not occur and there
    would not have been the first altercation if [plaintiff] had not voluntarily left the safety of his
    barstool.” The defendant contends that the trial justice overlooked evidence that plaintiff’s
    negligence was either equal to or greater than defendant’s negligence, including Place’s
    testimony that plaintiff turned down an offer to call an ambulance and plaintiff’s failure to leave
    its premises immediately after the first altercation. During oral argument before this Court,
    defendant also asserted that the trial justice was remiss by not placing more weight on the
    - 10 -
    reasonable inference that plaintiff chose to approach Gardiner prior to the first altercation
    notwithstanding Gardiner’s reputation.
    A trial justice can employ the mechanism of remittitur to either “reassess an erroneous
    damage award” or “correct a jury’s misapportionment of liability as it may relate to comparative
    negligence.” Cotrona v. Johnson & Wales College, 
    501 A.2d 728
    , 734 (R.I. 1985). A remittitur
    is appropriate when a “jury award clearly appears to be excessive or is found to be the result of
    the jury’s passion and prejudice.” Lennon, 
    901 A.2d at 590
    .
    At the hearing, the trial justice noted that it:
    “was clear * * * that the plaintiff was negligent in getting out of his
    seat in the first instance and walking to where Gardiner was
    between the end of the bar and the door; the point at which the first
    altercation ensued. * * * [T]his was not a wise move for the
    plaintiff[] [a]nd the jury responded accordingly by finding him 20
    percent comparatively negligent.”
    She ruled that “the apportionment rendered by the jury does respond truly to the merits of the
    controversy.   It administers substantial justice, and is supported by the fair weight of the
    evidence” because the worst of plaintiff’s injuries occurred during the second altercation. The
    damage award was, therefore,
    “largely attributed to the events [that occurred] after it was
    determined that the police would not be called following the first
    altercation. It is only just that the apportionment reflect that the
    plaintiff’s negligence[,] while contributing to his injuries[,] was not
    the same or greater than [defendant’s] negligence for failing to
    protect the plaintiff from reasonably foreseeable harm at the hand
    of Gardiner by failing to call the police after the first altercation
    took place.”
    We are satisfied that the trial justice clearly engaged in a thorough analysis of the
    defendant’s alternate motion for a reapportionment of the plaintiff’s comparative negligence.
    - 11 -
    There is no indication that the trial justice either overlooked or misconceived material evidence.
    We therefore uphold her denial of the motion. See Lennon, 
    901 A.2d at 590
    .
    IV
    Conclusion
    For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court. The record
    shall be returned to the Superior Court.
    Justice Flaherty did not participate.
    - 12 -
    RHODE ISLAND SUPREME COURT CLERK’S OFFICE
    Clerk’s Office Order/Opinion Cover Sheet
    TITLE OF CASE:        Wayne Bitgood v. Gordon Greene Post Number 27 of the
    American Legion.
    CASE NO:              No. 2013-352-Appeal.
    (WC 10-613)
    COURT:                Supreme Court
    DATE OPINION FILED: January 16, 2015
    JUSTICES:             Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    WRITTEN BY:           Chief Justice Paul A. Suttell
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:     Washington County Superior Court
    JUDGE FROM LOWER COURT:
    Associate Justice Kristin E. Rodgers
    ATTORNEYS ON APPEAL:
    For Plaintiff: Eric B. DiMario, Esq.
    For Defendant: Lewis J. Paras, Esq.