DocketNumber: No. CV 95 0125410 S
Citation Numbers: 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 4209
Judges: HODGSON, JUDGE of the SUPERIOR COURT
Filed Date: 4/26/1999
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
After the jury rendered its verdicts against each of the remaining defendants, the court scheduled a collateral source reduction hearing. The plaintiff moved for an award of attorney fees and punitive damages on his Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices, Conn. Gen. Stats. § 41-110a, et seq. ("CUTPA"), claim against the defaulted defendant, Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc. Mr. Taylor, who had filed timely motions to set aside the verdict against him and for remittitur and for a new trial, appeared at the scheduled hearing without counsel. The court continued to April 9, 1999, the hearing and argument on pending CT Page 4210 motions. On that date, a lawyer entered an appearance on behalf of both Roderick Taylor and Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc. On the same date, defendants' counsel filed amended motions to set aside the verdict, for a new trial, and for remittitur as to the verdict against Roderick Taylor.
Defendants' counsel also filed motions to set side, for new trial, and for remittitur as to Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc. These motions were denominated "amended" motions, however, no such motions had been filed before April 9, 1999, on behalf of this defendant. The plaintiff has raised no objection to the timeliness of the motions filed on behalf of Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc., and argued the motions on the merits. This court therefore concludes that the plaintiff waived any objections based on time limits for the filing of the motions.
The court heard argument and denied the plaintiff's Motion for Award of Punitive Damages as Against the Defendant Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc. and Plaintiff's Motion for Attorney's Fees as Against the Defendant Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc.
Counsel requested a week to brief the issue whether collateral source reductions are to be applied to the gross amount of damages found by the jury or to the net amount of the actual award to the plaintiff.
The court finds as follows with regard to the defendants' post-trial motions.
The jury rendered a verdict in which it made the same finding of damages against the corporation as against defendant Taylor, plus an additional award reflecting the claim that failure to provide emergency services to the plaintiff constituted a violation of CUTPA.
This court concludes that the judgment against Woodbury Ski
Racquet, Inc. should be set aside. Even in a hearing in damages, where the factual allegations of the complaint are deemed proven by the entry of the default, see Costello v. Hartford Instituteof Accounting, Inc.,
Though the plaintiff argues that the landowner would be liable because of general principles of premises liability, the claims made concern not the condition of the premises but the CT Page 4212 operation of a sledding enterprise on that premises. The claims of negligence listed in the complaint, at paragraphs 22(a)-(h), are claims regarding the operation of the sledding hill by defendant Taylor. Count Three alleges a violation of CUTPA, by the method of operating the sledding activities.
The evidence did not indicate that any entity other than defendant Taylor made decisions about the manner of operating that enterprise, and there was no evidence to support a conclusion that he acted on behalf of the corporation, which the evidence indicated had gone out of existence years before. There was no evidence from which the jury could reasonably have found that the actions of Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc. proximately caused any of the injuries claimed by the plaintiff.
The Supreme Court has identified the standard for setting aside a verdict in Palomba v. Gray,
Under the evidence, the conclusion that Woodbury Ski
Racquet, Inc. was functioning and was operating the sledding area at the time of the incident or that defendant Taylor was acting as its agent could only have proceeded from a mistake by the jury in applying the legal principle that the verdict must be based on a fair preponderance of the evidence as to proximate cause, and not on speculation. There was no evidence that Woodbury Ski
Racquet, Inc. employed Roderick Taylor at the time or that it was in any way in operation as a corporation after it was dissolved. All that was shown was that the property had not been conveyed to shareholders after the dissolution. This court overlooked the above analysis in submitting the claims against the corporation to the jury, but must not, under the principles of Breen v.Phelps,
The plaintiff has the obvious concern that defendant Taylor, who was identified in the evidence as the shareholder to whom the assets of the dissolved corporation should have been conveyed upon dissolution, will somehow avoid being title owner of the property lest it be subject to execution in the judgment against him. As counsel for both defendants has acknowledged at page 10 of the brief in support of the motion to set aside the verdict against the corporation, if actual conveyance to shareholders does not occur as it should, a party may seek relief in a proceeding to determine the shareholder's equitable ownership.
The motion to set aside the verdict against Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc. is granted.
Defendant Taylor's arguments imply a duty of the court to assist a pro se party. While a judge trying a case in which one party is acting pro se must be careful, as always, to preserve the fairness of the trial, the adversary system is not suspended, and the judge cannot become the adviser or tactician for the pro se party. People who choose to represent themselves must be accorded the dignity of their own choice. They, like lawyers, must be assumed to be making choices of strategy, and the court cannot presume to determine when a failure to object is tactical and when it is not. The mention by plaintiff's counsel of the occupation of the plaintiff's father was a risky one: a jury might as easily be offended or put off by such an affiliation. CT Page 4214 Defendant Taylor's failure to object could have proceeded from his calculation that the jury would react negatively to this information, and, indeed, to plaintiff's counsel's other arguments to the jury.
In his brief, defendant Taylor implies that if a party chooses to try a case pro se and then hires counsel, his omissions or mistakes of strategy at trial should entitle him to a new trial. Such a suggestion overlooks the fact that litigants are entitled to one trial, not two, and that dissatisfaction at the result of the decision to try the case pro se does not create a right to burden one's adversary with the expense in time and money of a second trial. The Supreme Court has ruled that failure to object at the proper time or to request a curative instruction or charge constitutes a waiver of a claim of error. Skrzypiec v.Noonan,
The movant claims that it was error for this court not to allow him to amend his special defenses to add claims arising under certain statutes concerning the sport of skiing. The motion for leave to amend was not made until after the close of evidence. Defendant Taylor sought to apply to a sledding accident an assumption of risk doctrine in statutes, Conn. Gen. Stat. §
The movant implies that the court had an obligation to allow amendment because of his pro se status, suspending the usual standards of assessing prejudice to other parties. Causing the plaintiff to contest a statute not mentioned in the pleadings at any time for three years, inserting a legal doctrine not previously put at issue, would indeed be unfair. Unlike the situation in Tarzia v. Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co.,
Defendant Taylor suggests that by claiming in his special defenses that the plaintiff failed to comply with the regulations of the ski area and to heed warnings, he effectively pleaded the substance of the statutes concerning the liability of ski areas for ski accidents. The wording of the pleadings does not suggest that the defendant was stating any statutory protection or standard; rather, the facts alleged merely sound in contributory negligence. The pleading that the court deemed to be the defendant's answer and special defenses did not identify failure to wear goggles as a special defense.
The movant further claims that it was error not to charge on a statutory defense not stated in the pleadings. Even if perceived errors in a jury charge were a basis for a motion to set aside a verdict, this court cannot agree that the pleadings as they stood required a charge on a statute not pleaded.
Defendant Taylor claims as an additional ground for setting aside the verdict against him that this court should not have sent the jury back to consider the issue of noneconomic damages. The jury came in with a verdict in which it filled in a dollar amount for economic damages but filled in a zero on the blank designated for noneconomic damages. The evidence in the case was to the effect that the plaintiff had suffered fractures to the bones of his face and loss of teeth, and that he had undergone corrective surgeries. There was absolutely no way a reasonable jury could have concluded that though the medical expenses were warranted, there had been no actual physical injury. In Childs v.Bainer,
Very recently, in Gladu v. Sousa,
No reasonable jury could logically have found in the case before this court that the plaintiff incurred medical expenses that had no basis in actual physical injury. The evidence was undisputed and unquestioned that the plaintiff's teeth lay in the snow after the incident and that his facial bones were fractured. Even without considering pain and suffering, such evidence indicates a physical injury. A zero award on noneconomic damages can only have resulted from the mistake of thinking that compensation for some elements of damages was merely discretionary, or a mistake in failing to consider that noneconomic damages include not only such subjective elements as pain and suffering, but also the physical injury itself and loss of parts of the body. This court did not, as the movant suggests, direct the jury to find noneconomic damages, but only to reconsider the issue. The jury's finding is supported by the uncontroverted evidence that the plaintiff suffered loss of teeth, a fracture of facial bones, inability to eat normally for a considerable period of time, loss of the ability to speak normally, and physical pain.
Practice Book §
The plaintiff's calculation is supported by the Supreme Court's interpretation of the wording of Conn. Gen. Stat. §
The statute requires that collateral sources be deducted only from the "award which represents economic damages." In Fleming v.Garnett, supra,
Reducing the $60,000 of economic damages by $18,411.28, the CT Page 4218 remainder is $41,588.72. Adding the $40,000 of noneconomic damages, the total damages awarded less the deduction for collateral sources is $81,588.72. Since the plaintiff was found to be 50% at fault, pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Defendant Taylor asserts that the award against him should be further reduced by the $1500 received by the plaintiff in his settlement with the Ames defendants. The jury found those defendants not to be at fault. On the verdict form, the jury indicated that the percentage of negligence attributable to these defendants was zero. Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Judgment shall enter in favor of the plaintiff against defendant Roderick Taylor in the amount of $40,794.36. Judgment shall enter in favor of defendant Woodbury Ski Racquet, Inc., no damages having been proven to have been proximately caused by any negligence by that entity. The plaintiff shall recover his costs. CT Page 4219
Beverly J. Hodgson Judge of the Superior Court