DocketNumber: A163733
Judges: Armstrong, Shorr, Tookey
Filed Date: 3/20/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
*660Plaintiff sustained injuries during an altercation with defendant. In this personal injury action, he seeks recovery from defendant for, among other harm, his medical expenses. After the close of plaintiff's case, defendant moved to strike plaintiff's claim for damages for medical expenses, contending that those expenses could not be recovered because plaintiff had failed to produce any evidence that the amount that plaintiff was charged for the medical treatment that plaintiff had received was reasonable. The trial court denied defendant's motion to strike. The jury found in favor of plaintiff, awarding plaintiff economic and noneconomic damages. Defendant appeals from a general judgment, assigning error to, among other rulings, the trial court's denial of his motion to strike.
*528For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand.
The material facts are not in dispute. Plaintiff and defendant were in an altercation during which plaintiff was cut by a knife wielded by defendant. Plaintiff sought and received medical treatment for his injuries. The medical treatment included three separate visits to the Tuality Community Hospital emergency room.
Plaintiff sued defendant for battery and assault, seeking, among other types of damages, economic damages for his medical expenses. During the resulting trial, plaintiff presented evidence of the amount that he was charged by Tuality Community Hospital for the medical treatment that he had received, submitting into evidence copies of the bills that he had received from Tuality Community Hospital. Additionally, plaintiff presented testimony from an expert witness, Dr. Paul Puziss, who testified that the treatment plaintiff received was reasonable:
"Q: And the treatment that you understand he had received at that point, do you believe that that was reasonable, under the circumstances?
"A: Yes. He went to the emergency room, they sutured [his wound ] properly. They didn't see a nerve injury, but *661clearly he had one. He returned there a couple more times, in part complaining of pain, in part for wound check. There never was, fortunately, a post-injury infection. But he had appropriate treatment.
"* * * * *
"Q: So you already testified that his-you understood his-his medical treatment to be reasonable?
"A: It was."
After the close of plaintiff's case, defendant moved to strike plaintiff's claim for damages for medical expenses because, according to defendant, plaintiff had failed to produce any evidence that the medical expenses incurred by plaintiff were reasonable. The trial court initially granted the motion. Subsequently, however, the trial court reversed its ruling, concluding that the evidence was sufficient for the jury to determine whether plaintiff's medical expenses were reasonable because "there [was] reasonable treatment that was rendered" and there were "not complex medical expenses" at issue in this case.
After the parties' closing arguments, the jury was instructed per UCJI 70.04 that, "[i]f you find that the plaintiff is entitled to recover economic damages, you must award some noneconomic damages." The jury ultimately returned a verdict for plaintiff, awarding both economic damages and noneconomic damages.
On appeal, defendant argues, among other points, that the trial court erred when it denied his motion to strike, because a party seeking to recover damages for medical expenses must present some evidence, beyond medical bills themselves, that such expenses are reasonable.
Given the parties' arguments on appeal in this case, in reviewing the trial court's denial of defendant's motion to strike, we *529"view the evidence and reasonable inferences from it in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the nonmoving party, and affirm the denial if there is any evidence to support it." Lea v. Farmers Ins. Co. ,
In Tuohy v. Columbia Steel Co. ,
In resolving the parties' arguments in this case, our decision in *663State v. McClelland ,
As noted above, on appeal, plaintiff contends that trial court did not err in denying defendant's motion to strike because plaintiff relied not only on his medical bills, but also on Puziss's testimony to establish that plaintiff's medical expenses were reasonable. The difficulty with plaintiff's argument is that Puziss's testimony, as quoted above, establishes that the provision of the medical treatment rendered to plaintiff was itself reasonable. However, that the medical treatment *664rendered to plaintiff was reasonable, or even necessary, does not, without more, allow for an inference that the charges billed for that medical treatment were reasonable. *530State v. Campbell ,
Without evidence that the charges billed were reasonable, it was error for the trial court to deny defendant's motion to strike because the factfinder cannot be presumed to know what a reasonable charge for medical services is based on the factfinder's own experience, and without further evidence. See McClelland ,
Plaintiff argues that this case is similar to Ellington , a personal injury action in which we concluded that the trial court did not err in denying the defendant's motion for a directed verdict with respect to physical therapy expenses.
We next turn to plaintiff's argument that defendant's statements during closing argument constitute "judicial admissions" that the medical expenses plaintiff incurred were reasonable. Plaintiff relies on two statements made during closing argument to support his contention, both of which are provided below with appropriate context:
In the first statement, defendant argued,
"[s]o, now, * * * [plaintiff is] asking for impaired earning capacity of $ 30,000, and medical expenses, which [plaintiff] didn't bring, by the way, anybody in here to say that those were reasonable prices.
"Now, obviously, it's Tuality Hospital. They have the regular billing thing. But take a good look at those bills. And take a look at which columns each of them go-and you'll see something there that's pretty interesting."
In the second statement, defendant argued,
"[s]o, you have to consider how much is a cut-with the pain that he suffered at the time, and the inconvenience of going to the doctors and-and all of that, how much is that worth? And I submit to you that I don't think it's worth more than $ 10,000. Plaintif thinks it's worth $ 280,000. But in the grand scheme of things for a cut that, after three years, doesn't have anything objectively wrong with it, is-has some monetary value on that, but certainly not $ 280,000."
"A judicial admission is a statement 'made by a party or his attorney for the purpose of dispensing with proof of a fact in issue.' " Lea ,
In support of his argument, plaintiff relies on Lea . In Lea , we determined that the *531plaintiff had failed to *666establish that his medical expenses were reasonable and that the trial court erred in denying the defendant's motion "to strike the claim for damages for medical expenses." Id. at 561,
Unlike in Lea , in this case, we do not view defendant's statements during closing argument as judicial admissions that plaintiff's medical expenses were reasonable. It appears to us that the first statement that plaintiff relies on was not made for the purpose of telling the jury that it need not consider the reasonableness of plaintiff's medical bills. That is, defendant asked the jury to "take a good look at those [medical] bills" because the jury would "see something there that's pretty interesting," and specifically noted that plaintiff had not presented testimony indicating that the charges reflected in the medical bills were reasonable. The second statement plaintiff relies on concerns plaintiff's request for noneconomic damages, as evidenced by defendant's reference to "the pain that [plaintiff] suffered" and "$ 280,000," which is the amount that plaintiff requested the jury award for noneconomic damages. Thus, we do not view either statement as a judicial admission that plaintiff's medical expenses were reasonable.
In sum, we conclude that the trial court erred in denying defendant's motion to strike plaintiff's claim for economic damages related to plaintiff's medical expenses.
*667We also conclude that the trial court's error was not cured by judicial admissions made by defendant during closing argument. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
Reversed and remanded.
In light of our conclusions below, we need not address defendant's second assignment of error.
Defendant also contends, more generally, that plaintiff failed to "present any evidence as to any other claimed economic damages." Plaintiff conceded at oral argument that there was no evidence regarding the potential cost of any future medical expenses and, in his briefing, points to no evidence supporting any other economic damages in this case.
As noted, McClelland concerned the propriety of an order requiring the defendant to pay restitution. Consequently, our analysis in McClelland construed the phrase "economic damages" in ORS 137.106, which, with one exception, has the meaning given to that phrase in ORS 31.710.
Our analysis in McClelland is instructive in this case because, in discussing the phrase "economic damages" as defined in ORS 31.710(2)(a), we recognized that when the legislature "enacted ORS 31.710(2)(a) and its definition of economic damages it did so in light of the underlying law" and that, consistent with that law, "a plaintiff seeking damages for medical expenses must establish the reasonableness of medical costs, through testimony or other evidence, beyond the existence of a medical bill ."