Kathleen Kuk And David Kuk, Res. v. Jason Smith And United Parcel Service, Inc., Apps. ( 2013 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    KATHLEEN KUK and DAVID KUK,
    individually and as husband and wife,            No. 68617-8-1                t-.'
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    Respondents,               DIVISION ONE                   cr.
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    JASON SMITH and JANE DOE SMITH,                  UNPUBLISHED OPINION                    lO       CT
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    individually and the marital community                                                  ro
    thereof, and UNITED PARCEL                       FILED: July 1,2013
    SERVICE, INC.,
    Appellants.
    J
    Becker, J. —This appeal arises from a personal injury action after a car
    collision. A jury found the two drivers equally at fault and awarded both parties
    all undisputed special damages. But the jury awarded nothing in general
    damages to appellant Kuk for the undisputed pain and suffering that
    accompanied the injury to her hand. We affirm the order granting Kuk's motion
    for a new trial on damages.
    Around 4 p.m. on May 7, 2008, Kathleen Kuk's Honda minivan collided
    with a United Parcel Service delivery truck as the two vehicles attempted to pass
    through an intersection in Everett, Washington. Both vehicles were damaged.
    One of Kuk's fingers was broken.
    No. 68617-8-1/2
    In October 2009, Kuk and her husband sued United Parcel and the driver,
    Jason Smith, for negligence. United Parcel counterclaimed, alleging negligence
    by Kuk resulting in the damage to the truck.
    A jury trial lasting three days was held in February 2012. Smith admitted
    that his own light was red when he began his left-hand turn into Kuk's path. Kuk
    testified that the light turned yellow right before she entered the intersection and
    that she sped up to clear the intersection before the light turned red. But an
    expert testified that the yellow and red lights at the intersection were timed
    identically for cars traveling in both directions, so when the light turned red for
    Smith, it was also red for Kuk. And an eyewitness testified that Kuk ran the red
    light. Further, there was evidence that Kuk was holding her cell phone to her ear
    at the time of the collision while she waited on hold to make a comment on the air
    with a talk radio station.
    Kuk's treating physician testified that the finger injury had caused Kuk
    significant pain and resulted in permanent loss of motion in her dominant hand.
    Kuk and her family and friends testified that she suffered a lengthy period of
    acute pain and was still unable to participate in her former hobbies because her
    grip was impaired. The defendants offered no contrary medical testimony. Their
    closing argument suggested that the jury award general damages, but only a
    modest amount, to compensate Kuk for her noneconomic losses.
    Jurors were instructed that ifthey found either party negligent, their verdict
    "must include" the opposing party's undisputed special damages: for Kuk,
    No. 68617-8-1/3
    $21,966.90 in medical costs and $12,000.00 in property damage; for United
    Parcel, $3,910.09 in property damage. As to Kuk's claim of noneconomic
    damages, the jurywas told that it "should consider" a variety of factors relating to
    suffering due to her injury.
    The jury returned a verdict finding both Smith and Kuk negligent and 50
    percent at fault. The jury awarded both parties their undisputed damages, but
    they awarded nothing to Kuk for noneconomic damages.
    Ten days after the verdict was entered, Kuk moved for a new trial on
    damages under CR 59. She argued the verdict was inadequate in light of the
    uncontroverted testimony that she suffered noneconomic damages. Smith
    opposed the motion. He argued that Kuk waived any objection to the inadequacy
    of the award by failing to object to the verdict before the jury was dismissed. The
    court concluded the lack of any general damages made the verdict inadequate
    and granted Kuk a new trial on damages. The court denied Smith's alternative
    argument that if a new trial was to be ordered it should be a full new trial on
    liability as well. Smith appeals from the order granting a new trial.
    The decision to grant or deny a new trial is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion. Kramer v. J.I. Case Mfg. Co., 
    62 Wash. App. 544
    , 561, 
    815 P.2d 798
    (1991). Where, as here, the appellant seeks to set aside an order granting a new
    trial, the reviewing court will require "a much stronger showing" of abuse of
    discretion than is necessary to set aside an order denying a new trial. Palmer v.
    Jensen. 
    132 Wash. 2d 193
    , 197, 
    937 P.2d 597
     (1997). This is because granting a
    No. 68617-8-1/4
    new trial "places the parties where they were before, while a denial of a new trial
    concludes their rights." Baxter v. Greyhound Corp.. 
    65 Wash. 2d 421
    , 437, 
    397 P.2d 857
     (1964); Palmer. 132 Wn.2d at 197. It is an abuse of discretion to deny
    a motion for a new trial where the verdict is contrary to the evidence. Palmer,
    132Wn.2dat198.
    Although there is no per se rule that general damages must be awarded to
    every plaintiff who sustains an injury, a plaintiff who substantiates her pain and
    suffering with evidence is entitled to general damages. Palmer, 132 Wn.2d at
    201. The adequacy of a verdict, therefore, turns on the evidence. Palmer. 132
    Wn.2d at 201. The court agreed with Kuk that in light of the evidence she
    presented, the verdict of no general damages was clearly inadequate and could
    only be explained by jury passion or prejudice.
    The court's order was a straightforward application of Palmer. The two
    cases are factually similar. In Palmer, the plaintiff presented uncontroverted
    medical evidence that she suffered neck and back pain for over two years after
    suffering a neck injury in a rear-end car collision. The jury nevertheless entered
    a damages verdict that was "exactly equal to" her undisputed medical expenses,
    with no general damages for pain and suffering. Palmer. 132 Wn.2d at 198-99.
    The trial court denied the plaintiff's motion for a new trial. The Supreme Court
    reversed, holding that the omission of general damages was contrary to the
    unchallenged medical evidence. Palmer. 132 Wn.2d at 203. The court ordered
    a new trial on damages.
    No. 68617-8-1/5
    Here, Smith agrees with Kuk that the undisputed medical evidence entitled
    her to an award of general damages under Palmer. Smith's argument to the trial
    court and on appeal is that the jury's error was so obvious and so inconsistent
    with Washington law that Kuk should have been required to object to the error
    immediately, before the jury was excused, so that the jury could have been sent
    back to deliberate again and bring in a verdict awarding general damages. Smith
    asks this court to fashion a new rule holding that a party waives the right under
    CR 59 to wait 10 days to move for a new trial based on verdict error when the
    basis of the motion is a clear rule of controlling case law. In such cases, he
    contends, it would further fairness and judicial economy to require the party to
    bring the inconsistency to the trial court's attention before the jury is dismissed.
    Presently, a trial court is required by CR 49(b) to return the jury "for further
    consideration of its answers and verdict" in a case where a general verdict is
    inconsistent with the jury's answers to special interrogatories:
    (b) General Verdict Accompanied by Answer to
    Interrogatories. The court may submit to the jury, together with
    appropriate forms for a general verdict, written interrogatories upon
    one or more issues of fact the decision of which is necessary to a
    verdict. . . . When the general verdict and the answers are
    harmonious, the appropriate judgment upon the verdict and
    answers shall be entered pursuant to rule 58. When the answers
    are consistent with each other but one or more is inconsistent with
    the general verdict, judgment may be entered pursuant to rule 58 in
    accordance with the answers, notwithstanding the general verdict,
    or the court may return the jury for further consideration of its
    answers and verdict or may order a new trial. When the answers
    are inconsistent with each other and one or more is likewise
    inconsistent with the general verdict, judgment shall not be entered,
    but the court shall return the jury for further consideration of its
    answers and verdict or shall order a new trial.
    No. 68617-8-1/6
    But the rule only applies where the jury's answers "are inconsistent with each
    other." CR 49(b) (emphasis added). This lack of internal consistency or
    coherence among the jury's various determinations is unlike the kind of external
    inconsistency with controlling case law that Kuk argued in her motion for a new
    trial.
    When a jury verdict is internally inconsistent under CR 49, a party who
    does not object immediately will be held to have waived the right to challenge the
    verdict through a motion for a new trial under CR 59. Gierde v. Fritzsche. 55 Wn.
    App. 387, 393-94, 
    777 P.2d 1072
     (1989). review denied. 
    113 Wash. 2d 1038
     (1990).
    In Gierde. the jury found against the plaintiff on her negligence claim. The
    instructions did not tell the jury to stop at that point, as they should have. Gierde.
    55 Wn. App. at 390. The jury went on to attribute 55 percent fault to the
    defendant and 45 percent to the plaintiff. Gierde. 55 Wn. App. at 392. The trial
    court entered judgment on the verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff appealed,
    arguing that the answers attributing fault to both parties were irreconcilable with
    the verdict finding that the defendant was not negligent. This court held that
    under CR 49, a failure to object to inconsistency in the verdict before the jury is
    discharged waives any objection on appeal. "The situation is analogous to the
    failure to object to evidence or a jury instruction." Gierde. 55 Wn. App. at 394.
    Smith argues that the rule of waiver established by Gierde should be
    extended beyond cases of internal inconsistency, which are covered by CR 49,
    to cases where the verdict is inconsistent with the law in a way that is
    No. 68617-8-1/7
    immediately recognizable.
    There are a number of serious flaws in the new rule Smith proposes.
    First, it would require courts to decide which principles of law are to be deemed
    "immediately recognizable." Such a standard would be imprecise in its contours
    and difficult to apply. The new rule would also require counsel to have the full
    breadth of case law on verdicts available for instant recall when a verdict is
    announced, without recourse to legal research after the jury is dismissed—an
    unrealistically high standard of performance.
    Another problem with Smith's proposal is that he would put the burden of
    objecting on only one party—Kuk, in the present case. But if the purpose of the
    proposed rule is to spare the expense of a new trial, then both parties are equally
    disadvantaged, and both should be expected to react immediately when the
    verdict is announced.
    Finally, Smith's proposed new rule is inherently unfair as it would be
    applied in this case. When a jury fails to award general damages after hearing
    undisputed evidence that would justify an award, it is reasonable to infer that the
    jury was affected by passion or prejudice. As the trial court recognized in the
    order granting a new trial, the jury was likely prejudiced against Kuk. Her
    testimony that the light was still yellow when she started through the intersection
    was severely undermined, and the evidence that she was engaged with her cell
    phone at the time of the collision could hardly have endeared her to the jury.
    Smith's proposed rule would require that the factual determination of general
    No. 68617-8-1/8
    damages be sent back to a jury that has already manifested its prejudice against
    the claimant.
    In summary, Palmer controls. Smith does not make a persuasive case for
    extending the waiver rule in Gierde beyond the parameters of CR 49. The trial
    court did not abuse its discretion in granting Kuk a new trial.
    Smith argues alternatively that if there is to be a new trial, it should be on
    liability as well as damages. His theory is that the jury heard more evidence of
    Kuk's negligence than of his own, so it must have been a compromise verdict. In
    other words, he theorizes that some jurors probably agreed to find him negligent
    only because others agreed to limit Kuk's damage award to her economic
    damages. Smith relies on Cvrus v. Martin. 
    64 Wash. 2d 810
    , 
    394 P.2d 369
     (1964),
    and Myers v. Smith. 
    51 Wash. 2d 700
    , 
    321 P.2d 551
     (1958). In these cases, the
    court held that where a claim of inadequate damages is coupled with a close
    case on liability, justice requires a new trial upon the entire case.
    Cvrus and Myers do not support Smith's argument. To begin with, it was
    not a close case on Smith's liability. Smith admitted beginning his left turn after
    the light turned red. He failed to notice Kuk's minivan speeding toward him
    though it was daylight and his view was unobstructed. The jury was instructed
    that the "primary duty" of avoiding collisions "rests upon the driver turning to the
    left, which duty must be performed with reasonable regard to the maintenance of
    a fair margin of safety at all times."
    In addition, Cvrus and Myers were premised on the old contributory
    8
    No. 68617-8-1/9
    negligence scheme under which any negligence by a plaintiff provided a
    complete defense. The adoption of the comparative negligence scheme and the
    use of special verdict forms has effectively eliminated the concern that juries,
    when shown negligence by both parties, will fashion their own comparative
    negligence scheme by finding liability on the part of the defendant but awarding
    lowdamages. Mina v. Boise Cascade Corp.. 
    104 Wash. 2d 696
    , 707, 
    710 P.2d 184
    (1985), citing Crawford v. Miller. 
    18 Wash. App. 151
    , 
    566 P.2d 1264
     (1977). Here,
    because the jury was instructed on comparative negligence, liability was not an
    all or nothing proposition. There is no reason to suspect that the 50/50 decision
    on liability was anything but a true verdict. The zero general damages award
    may well be evidence of juror prejudice against Kuk, but it is not evidence that
    the jurywas motivated to falsely attribute equal liability to Kuk's adversary. The
    trial court did not abuse its discretion by ordering a new trial limited to damages,
    as was done in Palmer.
    Finally, Smith asks that if there is a new trial on liability, the trial court
    should be instructed to reverse the sanctions that were imposed for delay by the
    defendants in providing requested discovery. Because we do not order a new
    trial on liability, it is unnecessary to address this issue. In any event, we see no
    abuse of discretion. The trial court was aware of its obligation to impose "the
    least severe sanction that will be adequate to serve the purpose." Wash. State
    Physicians Ins. Exch. & Ass'n v. Fisons Corp.. 
    122 Wash. 2d 299
    , 355-56, 
    858 P.2d 1054
     (1993); Burnet v. Spokane Ambulance. 
    131 Wash. 2d 484
    , 494-96, 933 P.2d
    No. 68617-8-1/10
    1036 (1997). The sanctions imposed were mild compared to the extreme
    sanctions sought by Kuk, and there is no reason to believe they unduly
    prejudiced the presentation of the defense case.
    Affirmed.
    WE CONCUR:
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