Evan R. Bakke v. Mt. Morris Mutual Insurance Company ( 2024 )


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  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                              NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                          This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    June 11, 2024
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Samuel A. Christensen                petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals             Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.        2023AP340                                                    Cir. Ct. No. 2019CV66
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                           IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT III
    EVAN R. BAKKE, AS SPECIAL ADMINISTRATOR
    FOR THE ESTATE OF LISA CAROL BAKKE,
    PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    MT. MORRIS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, STEPHEN TANSKI,
    DOUGLAS V. BROWN, SECURITY HEALTH PLAN OF WISCONSIN, INC.
    AND WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SERVICES,
    DEFENDANTS,
    AUTO OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY AND NORTHLAND BUILDERS, INC.,
    DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.
    APPEAL from a judgment and an order of the circuit court for
    Burnett County: MELISSIA R. MOGEN, Judge. Affirmed.
    Before Stark, P.J., Hruz and Gill, JJ.
    No. 2023AP340
    Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent
    or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).
    ¶1      PER CURIAM. Northland                 Builders,     Inc.,    and     Auto-Owners
    Insurance Company (collectively, “Northland”) appeal a judgment entered on a
    jury verdict in a personal injury action brought by Lisa Carol Bakke 1 and a circuit
    court order denying their postverdict motion. Northland argues that the court
    erred by not asking the jury to consider Bakke’s postaccident conduct when
    allocating causal negligence on the special verdict form and by refusing the jury’s
    request to see one of the experts’ photographs during deliberations. We conclude
    that the court did not err in either respect. We therefore affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2      Bakke was injured in 2016 when she fell through a railing while
    climbing the stairs of a cabin owned by Stephen Tanski. Tanski built the original
    stairs and railing on the cabin with a friend in 2000 or 2001 and then had a log
    railing installed in 2008. In 2010, Tanski hired Doug Brown from Northland to
    replace and upgrade the railing, which was failing due to rot. Bakke sued Tanski,
    Northland, and their respective insurers, seeking recovery for her injuries, which
    included a broken collarbone, a brain injury, cracked ribs, and spinal fractures.
    The parties stipulated that Bakke’s past medical and out-of-pocket expenses were
    $90,768.20, leaving the issues of liability and pain and suffering damages for the
    jury’s determination.
    1
    Bakke died from causes unrelated to her injury after filing this lawsuit but prior to trial.
    Evan Bakke, special administrator for the Estate of Lisa Carol Bakke, was substituted as the
    correct party in interest.
    2
    No. 2023AP340
    ¶3    At trial, Northland argued that Bakke did not exercise reasonable
    care in seeking or complying with medical treatment for her injuries. Northland
    presented evidence that Bakke refused to obtain medical care for several days
    following her fall and that she failed to participate in the recommended treatment
    for her injuries, including failing to engage in any cognitive therapy for her brain
    injury.
    ¶4    Regarding its liability for the railing’s failure, Northland argued that
    the underlying structure2 to which Brown had attached the railing broke due to rot.
    Northland presented expert testimony from Geoff Jillson, who opined that the
    railing’s failure was caused by two things: the wooden structure to which the
    railing was attached had deteriorated due to rot, causing a piece to snap off, and
    “the overall design of it from an engineer[ing] perspective.” Jillson documented
    his investigation with twenty-five pages of annotated photographs, which were
    admitted into evidence without objection, showing the broken board and the
    screws that pulled away from the wood. However, these photographs were never
    published to the jury. Instead, Northland used the board itself as an exhibit during
    the trial.
    ¶5    Bakke presented expert testimony from Richard Abbott. Abbott
    opined that Northland’s construction of the railing was deficient because the
    screws that connected the posts to the underlying structure “were very closely
    spaced together and the posts didn’t have a real good bite down onto” the
    2
    Northland’s opening brief provides a high level of detail regarding the construction of
    the stairs and the railing, including the respective roles of stringers, treads, risers, and newel
    posts. Although these details were helpful to us in understanding the testimony and in evaluating
    how the evidence supported each party’s theory of liability, we now refer generally to the portion
    of the stairs not installed by Northland as “the underlying structure.”
    3
    No. 2023AP340
    underlying structure. Abbott further testified that he would never have connected
    the railing to the underlying structure in the way that Brown had because “you
    have to just break off the tiniest piece” in order for the railing to fail. Regarding
    Northland’s theory that a piece of the underlying structure broke due to rot, Abbott
    testified that he observed weathering on the underlying structure but not rot.
    ¶6     Both Jillson and Abbott testified that the lateral load capacity for the
    railing was far below what the applicable building code required. Abbott opined
    that Bakke’s fall was caused by the fact that the railing “wasn’t designed and
    constructed according to code.”      In contrast, Jillson testified that Northland’s
    failure to comply with the building code was “okay.”
    ¶7     At the beginning of jury deliberations, the jury asked to see the
    photographs taken by Jillson. The circuit court denied this request. The jury
    returned a unanimous verdict that allocated 15% of the causal negligence for
    Bakke’s injuries to Tanski, 85% of the fault to Northland, and no fault to Bakke.
    The jury awarded $80,000 for Bakke’s pain, suffering, and disability.
    ¶8     Northland filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict
    or, in the alternative, for a new trial. Northland challenged the special verdict for
    only asking whether each party had been negligent “at or prior to the accident.” In
    particular, Northland argued that the jury should have been permitted to apportion
    causal negligence to Bakke based on her postaccident conduct of not promptly
    seeking medical treatment and not complying with the recommended treatment for
    her injuries. Northland also argued that the circuit court erred by refusing to send
    the requested photographs to the jury room. To support this aspect of its motion,
    Northland submitted an affidavit from Brown stating that a juror had come to
    Northland’s office shortly after the trial to complain that Northland had been
    4
    No. 2023AP340
    “unjustly railroaded.” The juror stated that he would have really liked to have
    seen Jillson’s photographs.
    ¶9     The circuit court denied Northland’s postverdict motion after a
    hearing and entered judgment in favor of Bakke. Northland now appeals this
    judgment and order.
    DISCUSSION
    I. The special verdict question
    ¶10    Northland first challenges the phrasing of the special verdict
    question that asked the jury to determine whether Bakke was causally negligent
    “at or prior to the accident.” Northland contends that the jury should also have
    considered whether Bakke was causally negligent after the accident. Specifically,
    Northland presented evidence that Bakke had delayed seeking medical attention
    for several days following her fall and also failed to participate in recommended
    treatment for her injuries. Northland argued that the jury should be permitted to
    allocate causal negligence to Bakke based on this postaccident conduct.
    ¶11    The circuit court disagreed, explaining that Bakke’s postaccident
    conduct went to damages and not to causal negligence. Accordingly, the court
    gave the jury a failure to mitigate damages instruction, which instructed the jury to
    consider Bakke’s postaccident conduct when determining its damages award.
    Northland agrees that the jury was properly instructed regarding Bakke’s failure to
    mitigate her damages. Nonetheless, Northland argues that the jury should have
    considered the same postaccident conduct when allocating causal negligence
    among Tanski, Northland, and Bakke.
    5
    No. 2023AP340
    ¶12      The parties disagree about the appropriate standard for our review of
    the content of the special verdict.            Bakke argues that we should review the
    questions on the special verdict for an erroneous exercise of discretion. See Vogel
    v. Grant-Lafayette Elec. Coop., 
    201 Wis. 2d 416
    , 422, 
    548 N.W.2d 829
     (1996)
    (“A circuit court has wide discretion as to the instructions and special verdicts
    given to a jury, provided that they adequately cover the law applicable to the
    facts.”). Northland argues that our review should be de novo because the content
    of a special verdict requires us to interpret and apply the statute governing special
    verdicts. See WIS. STAT. § 805.12 (2021-22);3 Theuer v. LIRC, 
    2001 WI 26
    , ¶5,
    
    242 Wis. 2d 29
    , 
    624 N.W.2d 110
     (“The interpretation of a statute and its
    application to undisputed facts are questions of law that courts generally review
    under a de novo standard.”).             Specifically, Northland points to the statutory
    requirement that a special verdict “be prepared by the court in the form of written
    questions relating only to material issues of ultimate fact and admitting a direct
    answer.” See § 805.12(1); see also Stuart v. Weisflog’s Showroom Gallery, Inc.,
    
    2008 WI 22
    , ¶12, 
    308 Wis. 2d 103
    , 
    746 N.W.2d 762
     (“[A] special verdict must
    cover all material issues of ultimate fact.”).
    ¶13      Regardless of the standard of review we use, we conclude that the
    circuit court correctly concluded that Bakke’s postaccident conduct presented only
    a damages issue and not an issue of causal negligence. Northland’s argument that
    Bakke’s postaccident conduct caused her injuries is creative, but it reflects a
    complete misunderstanding of tort liability and the role of a plaintiff’s failure to
    mitigate damages.
    3
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise
    noted.
    6
    No. 2023AP340
    ¶14    A plaintiff’s failure to mitigate damages is not a cause of the
    plaintiff’s injury because the plaintiff’s duty to exercise ordinary care to mitigate
    damages only arises after the plaintiff has been injured by negligent conduct. See
    Lobermeier v. General Tel. Co. of Wis., 
    119 Wis. 2d 129
    , 147, 
    349 N.W.2d 466
    (1984) (quoting with approval a prior version of the Wisconsin jury instruction
    stating that “it became the duty of the plaintiff when he was injured in the collision
    to exercise ordinary care to mitigate, or lessen, his damages”); see also WIS JI—
    CIVIL 1730 (2012) (“A person who has been injured must use ordinary care to
    mitigate or lessen … damages.”). Our supreme court has further explained that it
    is “a matter of black letter law” that “[a]ny suffering or disability incurred by one
    who has sustained personal injury, when the same could have been avoided by
    submitting to treatment by a physician selected with reasonable care, must be
    excluded as a ground of recovery.” Lobermeier, 
    119 Wis. 2d at 144-45
     (citation
    omitted). Thus, the circuit court here correctly applied Wisconsin law when it
    concluded that Bakke’s postaccident conduct went only to damages and not
    causation.
    ¶15    Because the parties stipulated to the amount that would fairly and
    reasonably compensate Bakke for her medical expenses, the only damage question
    for the jury to decide was the amount necessary to compensate Bakke for her pain,
    suffering, and disability. In answering this question, the jury was instructed that it
    should keep in mind Bakke’s duty to use ordinary care to mitigate damages. See
    WIS JI—CIVIL 1730 (2012). The jury was told that if it found that “Bakke did not
    do so, [it] should not include in [its] answer to the damage question any amount
    for consequences of the injury which reasonably could have been avoided.” See 
    id.
    (emphasis added).
    7
    No. 2023AP340
    ¶16     As noted above, Northland agrees that the jury was properly
    instructed regarding Bakke’s duty to mitigate her damages.                 Northland
    nevertheless argues that Bakke’s failure to exercise reasonable care with respect to
    her treatment should also be regarded as a negligent cause of her injuries. As
    Bakke points out, however, asking the jury to consider the same conduct as both
    contributory negligence and a failure to mitigate damages would permit “the jury
    to assess failure to mitigate damages twice.” Northland’s argument for double
    counting Bakke’s postaccident conduct has no support in Wisconsin tort law.
    ¶17     The authorities cited by Northland do not cast doubt on the circuit
    court’s decision regarding the content of the special verdict. Northland points to
    Clark v. Leisure Vehicles, Inc., 
    96 Wis. 2d 607
    , 
    292 N.W.2d 630
     (1980), in which
    our supreme court remanded a case for a new trial based on a flawed verdict
    question asking whether a particular defendant’s negligence was “the” cause of the
    plaintiff’s injury. 
    Id. at 619-20
    . The court explained that even though the jury
    was properly instructed that an injury could have multiple causes, the flawed
    wording of this question deprived the jury of the opportunity to evaluate whether
    the defendant’s negligence was “a” cause of the plaintiff’s injury. 
    Id.
    ¶18     Clark is not helpful to Northland because the special verdict
    questions in the present case properly guided the jury to consider each party’s
    causal negligence when allocating fault. The verdict questions requiring the jury
    to base its allocation of the parties’ negligence upon conduct occurring at or before
    the accident prevented juror confusion by ensuring that the jury did not double
    count Bakke’s failure to exercise reasonable care to mitigate her damages after she
    was injured.
    8
    No. 2023AP340
    ¶19     Northland further argues that viewing Bakke’s postaccident conduct
    as causal negligence is appropriate in this case because Bakke was seeking
    recovery for a “continuing cognitive injury.” Northland explains that although its
    negligent conduct may have caused Bakke to fall, which in turn may have started
    Bakke’s cognitive injury, “Bakke’s subsequent refusal to treat her concussion
    caused her to have long-term cognitive problems that she might not otherwise
    have had.” Bakke urges us to reject this argument as waived because Northland
    failed to raise it at the circuit court level. See State v. Dietzen, 
    164 Wis. 2d 205
    ,
    212, 
    474 N.W.2d 753
     (Ct. App. 1991) (an appellate court need not address an
    argument that a party has waived by not raising in the circuit court). Northland
    responds that “while the nuances of [its] argument have been refined since its
    postverdict motion, the core has remained unchanged.” Northland does not point
    us to anywhere in the record where it characterized Bakke’s injury as a continuing
    injury, so we decline to address this aspect of its argument.4
    4
    We note that Bakke is making a forfeiture argument and not a waiver argument. See
    generally State v. Ndina, 
    2009 WI 21
    , ¶29, 
    315 Wis. 2d 653
    , 
    761 N.W.2d 612
     (“forfeiture is the
    failure to make the timely assertion of a right, [whereas] waiver is the intentional relinquishment
    or abandonment of a known right.”) Our supreme court has explained that “[a]lthough cases
    sometimes use the words ‘forfeiture’ and ‘waiver’ interchangeably, the two words embody very
    different legal concepts.” 
    Id.
    Even if Northland had preserved its argument regarding Bakke’s continuing cognitive
    injury, we can easily reject it on the merits. Not only is this argument unsupported by any
    authority, it is also unsupported by any evidence. As Bakke points out, Northland did not “offer
    any evidence that Bakke’s injuries could have been reduced, or that her suffering could have been
    avoided with more treatment.” Northland argues that such evidence was unnecessary because the
    jury could use its common knowledge and ordinary experience to determine that Bakke’s failure
    to treat her injury caused the injury to persist. See Pinter v. Village of Stetsonville, 
    2019 WI 74
    ,
    ¶63, 
    387 Wis. 2d 475
    , 
    929 N.W.2d 547
     (“[I]f the matter is one of common knowledge or within
    the realm of ordinary experience, expert testimony is not required.”). We disagree with
    Northland’s unsupported assumption that the nature and extent of ongoing cognitive problems
    associated with a brain injury are a matter of common knowledge or within the realm of ordinary
    experience. Without expert testimony, the jury would not be able to determine whether Bakke
    could have avoided the ongoing consequences of her brain injury with reasonable treatment.
    9
    No. 2023AP340
    ¶20    Finally, Northland argues that the special verdict created a risk of
    juror confusion because “[t]here was absolutely nothing within the four corners of
    the special verdict that asked the jury to consider Bakke’s postaccident conduct.”
    As a result, Northland asserts that the jury may have been confused by the contrast
    between the special verdict question regarding Bakke’s conduct at or prior to the
    accident and the failure to mitigate instruction, which called for the jury to
    “silently factor [Bakke’s] … postaccident conduct into their calculation of
    damages.”
    ¶21    Northland’s argument, however, ignores the wording of the verdict
    form. As noted above, the verdict form instructed the jury to insert the amount it
    determined would fairly and reasonably compensate Bakke for her past pain,
    suffering, and disability. The circuit court then instructed the jury to exclude from
    its award any damages that were caused by Bakke’s failure to mitigate. In this
    way, the jury was clearly tasked with determining how Bakke’s failure to
    promptly seek and participate in recommended treatment for her injuries affected
    the damages award, if at all.
    ¶22    We further note that Northland’s reply brief disavows any argument
    that the jury instruction was insufficient to put the issue of failure to mitigate
    damages before the jury. We therefore reject Northland’s suggestion that the jury
    may have been confused about how to properly evaluate Bakke’s postaccident
    conduct.
    II. Jillson’s photographs
    ¶23    Northland also challenges the circuit court’s decision to deny the
    jury’s request to view photographs taken by Northland’s expert, Jillson. “The
    [circuit court] has discretion to determine what exhibits will be permitted in the
    10
    No. 2023AP340
    jury room.” Badger Bearing, Inc. v. Drives & Bearings, Inc., 
    111 Wis. 2d 659
    ,
    669, 
    331 N.W.2d 847
     (Ct. App. 1983). Even when an exhibit has been admitted
    into evidence without objection, “the [circuit court] still retain[s] discretion to
    determine whether or not this evidence should be allowed to go to the jury room.”
    Schnepf v. Rosenthal, 
    53 Wis. 2d 268
    , 272-73, 
    193 N.W.2d 32
     (1972). We
    review the circuit court’s determination for an erroneous exercise of discretion.
    See 
    id. at 273
    . In exercising its discretion, the court should consider “whether the
    exhibit will aid the jury in proper consideration of the case, whether a party will be
    unduly prejudiced by submission of the exhibit, and whether the exhibit could be
    subjected to improper use by the jury.” State v. Jensen, 
    147 Wis. 2d 240
    , 260,
    
    432 N.W.2d 913
     (1988).
    ¶24    Here, the circuit court explained that the photographs requested by
    the jury were “voluminous” pictures of the board itself that Northland had “used
    countless times” as an exhibit during the trial.       The photographs were “not
    numbered in any way, shape, or form,” and many of the photographs of the board
    had been greatly magnified to an unknown degree. The court concluded that the
    board itself was “the best piece of illustrative evidence” and that viewing “40 or
    more blown up pictures of the board … will confuse the jury.”
    ¶25    Northland contends that Jillson’s photographs were critical evidence
    to support its defense that Northland was not the cause of Bakke’s injuries because
    the photographs “showed the level of rot present on the stairs generally.”
    According to Northland, the photographs would have permitted the jury to “have
    easily seen that the wood was demonstrably weakened by rot.” Northland does
    not identify which of the twenty-five pages of pictures demonstrably shows rot, so
    we have no basis for evaluating this contention. Not only is Northland’s argument
    unsupported by any citations to the record, but it is also unsupported by
    11
    No. 2023AP340
    Northland’s own conduct at trial—as Bakke points out, Northland never published
    any of Jillson’s photographs to the jury.5 Instead, Northland relied on the actual
    board during trial, which supports the circuit court’s conclusion that the board
    itself was the best evidence of the board’s condition.                  We therefore reject
    Northland’s argument that Jillson’s photographs were critical to its defense.
    ¶26     The circuit court’s decision not to give the jury voluminous
    photographs that were cumulative to the physical evidence is supported by our
    supreme court’s decision in Shoemaker v. Marc’s Big Boy, 
    51 Wis. 2d 611
    , 
    187 N.W.2d 815
     (1971). In Shoemaker, the trial judge refused to permit an accident
    report to be sent to the jury room, even though the report had been admitted into
    evidence and read to the jury. See 
    id. at 618-19
    . The judge explained that “much
    of the testimony in the written report was cumulative to the testimonial evidence
    and he did not wish to overemphasize the written statements of the report.” 
    Id. at 619
    . Our supreme court concluded that the circuit court had properly exercised its
    discretion in refusing to send the report to the jury. See 
    id.
    ¶27     The case for not sending Jillson’s photographs to the jury is even
    stronger than in Shoemaker, where the contents of the report had been read to the
    jury during trial. See 
    id. at 618
    . In contrast, Northland did not publish Jillson’s
    photographs to the jury during trial, so the jury would have been viewing them for
    the first time during its deliberations. As Bakke points out, “[t]he jury would be
    5
    For similar reasons, we reject Northland’s argument that sending Jillson’s photographs
    to the jury room would have bolstered Jillson’s credibility by showing the “meticulous level of
    detail in his investigation.” In its brief, Northland identifies many differences in the level of
    detail between Jillson’s investigation and Abbott’s investigation that it called to the jury’s
    attention during trial. If Northland believes that Jillson’s photographs would have helped to
    sharpen the contrast between the two experts, Northland could have published these photographs
    to the jury during trial.
    12
    No. 2023AP340
    left to interpret [the photographs] without any witness testimony as to what was
    contained in the photographs and without the benefit of cross-examination.” Thus,
    not only were Jillson’s photographs cumulative to the physical evidence that was
    presented at trial, but they would likely have been confusing to the jury and would
    have distracted it from the evidence that the parties had relied upon during trial.
    We therefore conclude that the circuit court did not erroneously exercise its
    discretion by refusing to send Jillson’s photographs to the jury room.
    ¶28    The fact that the jury requested Jillson’s photographs at the
    beginning of deliberations does not change our analysis, nor does Brown’s
    affidavit relating the juror’s complaint about not being able to see the photographs.
    Whether the jury believes that having particular evidence may be helpful is not
    among the factors that the circuit court must consider when deciding whether to
    send evidence into the jury room. See Jensen, 
    147 Wis. 2d at 260
    . In particular, it
    is for the court to determine “whether the exhibit will aid the jury in proper
    consideration of the case.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). We further note that, here, the
    jurors had no reason to believe that viewing the photographs in the jury room
    would have aided their proper consideration of the case given the fact that the
    photographs had never been published to the jury.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶29    We conclude that the special verdict question regarding Bakke’s
    causal negligence correctly reflected Wisconsin tort law. We further conclude that
    the circuit court did not erroneously exercise its discretion by refusing to send
    Jillson’s photographs to the jury room. We therefore affirm the judgment and the
    court’s order denying Northland’s postverdict motion.
    By the Court.—Judgment and order affirmed.
    13
    No. 2023AP340
    This      opinion   will   not    be   published.   See   WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)5.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2023AP000340

Filed Date: 6/11/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024