MICHAEL P. SHEA, District Judge.
Plaintiff Indrawatie Shiwbodh brought this action against defendant Caribbean Airlines Limited for injuries she allegedly suffered in the July 30, 2011 crash of Caribbean Airlines Flight BW523. After the case returned to this Court following consolidated multi-district litigation proceedings concerning the plane crash in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, the parties agreed that the sole remaining disputes between them were whether the crash proximately caused the plaintiff's injuries and the amount of damages to which the plaintiff was entitled. To decide these issues, I held a three-day bench trial from December 11
Following a three-day bench trial, I issued a Memorandum of Decision on March 27, 2018, awarding the plaintiff various damages based upon injuries proximately caused by the July 30, 2011 plane crash. In particular, I concluded that "the defendant proximately caused the following injuries to the plaintiff: (1) her ankle injury through July 29, 2015; (2) her knee injury through September of 2012; (3) her back injury through October of 2011; and (4) her head injury through May of 2012. (Memorandum of Decision at 1.) I also found "that the plaintiff [was] entitled to $68,093.04 in economic damages and $204,279.12 for pain and suffering, for a total judgment amount of $272,372.16." (Id.)
The plaintiff's medical expenses constituted $55,690.43 of her economic damages. (Id. at 36.) These damages were lower than they otherwise would have been, however, due to the plaintiff's failure "to present [these damages] in a comprehensible manner." (Id. at 33.) In particular, the plaintiff "merely included a series of medical bills in the record" and "did not present any testimony linking these various bills to specific medical treatments." (Id. at 33-34.) As a result of this failure, I determined that I would "award the plaintiff damages for only those medical bills admitted into evidence that contain[ed]: (1) a corresponding treatment report or other report reflecting the plaintiff's treatment; (2) a clear indication of which provider issued the medical bill; (3) a clear statement of the charges incurred; and (4) the date of the treatment." (Id. at 34.) Without such information, I could not find that the plaintiff had carried her burden to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the lists of otherwise unexplained charges included in the trial record were actually linked to the plaintiff's compensable injuries and, thus, constituted recoverable damages. See S. Leo Harmonay, Inc. v. Binks Mfg. Co., 597 F.Supp. 1014, 1030 (S.D.N.Y. 1984) ("It is fundamental to the law of damages that one complaining of injury has the burden of proving the extent of the harm suffered . . . ."). I listed the medical bills in the trial record that met this standard in a table in my Memorandum of Decision. (Id. at 35-36.)
The remainder of the plaintiff's economic damages stemmed from her lost earnings due to her inability to work after the plane crash. (Id. at 40.) These lost earnings, however, were limited to the period in which the defendant conceded it had proximately caused all of the plaintiff's injuries—i.e., from the plane crash on July 30, 2011 to October 31, 2011. (Id.) I limited the plaintiff's damages in this way due to the testimony of plaintiff's expert, Dr. Jeffrey Joy, who testified that he could not speak to—and was not asked to look into—the impact of each of the plaintiff's individual injuries on her inability to work. (Id. at 38-39.) The plaintiff did not present any other expert testimony attesting to the effects of the plaintiff's individual injuries on her ability to work during the relevant periods described above.
The plaintiff filed her motion to amend the judgment on April 24, 2018. (ECF No. 75).
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(b) ("Rule 52(b)") provides in relevant part: "On a party's motion filed no later than 28 days after the entry of judgment, the court may amend its findings—or make additional findings—and may amend the judgment accordingly." The purpose of Rule 52(b) "is to give the district court an opportunity to correct manifest errors of law or fact at trial, or in some limited situations, to present newly discovered evidence." United States v. Local 1804-1, Int'l Longshoremen's Ass'n, 831 F.Supp. 167, 169 (S.D.N.Y. 1993). A Rule 52(b) motions is a limited vehicle, however, and it may not be used to "introduce evidence that was available at trial but was not proffered, relitigate old issues, . . . [or to] advance new theories" based on "the acuity of hindsight." Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted.) "Nor does the Rule provide an avenue for a party merely ruing an oversight of its own in failing to introduce foreseeably relevant evidence." Soberman v. Groff Studios Corp., 2000 WL 1253211 *1 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 5, 2000).
The plaintiff makes two main arguments in her motion to amend the judgment. First, she contends that the Court should have included various medical expenses in calculating her medical damages. (ECF No. 75 at 3.) Second, she argues that the Court erred in calculating her lost earnings. (Id. at 5.) I address these contentions in turn.
The plaintiff contends that the Court should amend its calculation of her medical damages to reflect evidence of various medical expenses contained in the trial record. The first of these medical expenses consists, according to the plaintiff, of expenses she incurred in relation to her second ankle surgery, which was performed by Dr. Enzo Sella on August 21, 2013.
I do not agree, however, with the plaintiff's contention that the Court erred in calculating her damages for her third ankle surgery on July 29, 2015, which was performed by Dr. Allen Ferrucci. (ECF No. 75 at 3.) The Court awarded the plaintiff $17,430.00 in medical damages for that procedure based upon the evidence submitted at trial. (Memorandum of Decision at 35.) The plaintiff now seeks additional amounts for the same procedure, citing bills in the trial record that list the date, "7/29/15," a brief descriptor of some sort of medical procedure, and an amount. (See Tr. Ex. 17G at 16-18.) The problem with these documents, however, is that they appear to duplicate, at least to some degree, amounts the Court already awarded, and in any event the plaintiff offers (and offered at trial) no explanation of these bills to show that they do not duplicate or overlap with amounts included in the $17,430 figure. The $17,430 was based on a document in Exhibit 17G with the heading "Connecticut Orthopaedic Specialists", the date of July 29, 2015, and a list of charges for specifically described procedures, such as "repair lower leg tendons," "ankle arthroscopy," "release of lower leg tendon," "repair of ankle ligament," and "repair of foot tendon." (Ex. 17G, p. 8). The documents to which the plaintiff now draws the Court's attention — which are at pages 16-18 of Trial Exhibit G — carry the heading "Conn. Ortho. Spec.," which, absent any other explanation provided by the plaintiff, indicates that these documents reflect charges by the same provider. These documents list charges corresponding to "7/29/15" that describe identical or nearly identical procedures to those shown on page 8, i.e., "arthroscopy, ankle", "repair, dislocating peroneal," "repair, primary, disrupted L," and "repair, tendon, flexor, foot." The charges on these documents, however, differ in amount from those set forth on page 8. It may well be that there is an innocent explanation for this, such as that the latter documents reflect hospital charges incurred by Connecticut Orthopaedic Specialists, but that is just speculation.
Next, the plaintiff contends that the Court should have included various medical costs associated with Dr. Martin Hasenfeld's treatment of her back through October 31, 2011.
The same cannot be said for the plaintiff's argument concerning Trial Exhibit 17K. As an initial matter, the twin $2,400 charges the plaintiff identifies in the appendix to her motion (ECF No. 77-1 at 5) do not appear to correspond to any of the charges in Trial Exhibit 17K, either by dollar amount or by date. In any event, there is only one charge in that exhibit dated before November 1, 2011. This charge reads as follows: "10/31/11 CIGNA HP ADJ 1919.50CR." (See Tr. Ex. 17K at 2.) Such a charge (if it even is a charge) obviously does not meet the standard described in the Court's Memorandum of Decision. The plaintiff notes that the defendant, which also pointed out the absence of the charges in question (see ECF No. 76 at 5-6), "appears to cite to a version of [Trial Exhibit 17K] that is missing its first page, as the complete exhibit plainly contains an entry dated October 28, 2011." (ECF No. 81 at 6.) The plaintiff "accordingly asks the Court to enter the appropriate ruling based on the copy of Trial Exhibit 17K that was admitted into evidence as reflected in the Court's file." (Id.) Since, as noted above, the version of Trial Exhibit 17K admitted into evidence does not contain the page or charges the plaintiff references, I deny her request to add them to her judgment.
The plaintiff also argues that the Court should amend its judgment to provide her with medical damages corresponding to the costs of treatment she received from Dr. Lorenzo S. Galante.
Finally, the plaintiff contends that the Court inadvertently omitted $165 from its award for costs associated with her treatment by Dr. Adam Mednick.
I therefore conclude that the plaintiff is entitled to an additional $14,367.62 in economic damages for her medical expenses.
The plaintiff makes two arguments concerning the Court's calculation of her lost earnings. First, she contends that she "is entitled to recover lost wages for the period of time she remained employed at Covidien [i.e., until May 23, 2012 (ECF No. 75 at 6 n. 5)] but, due to her ankle and knee injuries, was unfit to work there." (ECF No. 75 at 7.) In support of this argument, she notes the Court's citation to Dr. Ferrucci's testimony "that the plaintiff was still able to perform sedentary work despite her ankle and knee injuries" (Memorandum of Decision at 39 (citing Tr. Ex. 11S at 83-85)). Since her employment at Covidien did not involve sedentary work, she avers, she should be entitled to lost wages for the period of work she missed there. (ECF No. 75 at 6.) But Dr. Ferrucci testified that the plaintiff's ankle and knee injuries confined her to sedentary work only since the time of her third ankle surgery. (See Tr. Ex. 11S at 84 (Q: "And since the time of [the plaintiff's third ankle surgery on July 29, 2015], do you have an opinion, based upon a reasonable degree of medical probability, as to whether since that time, she had a work capacity?" A: . . . "[I]t was documented that I said sedentary only. . . . I don't think she could do anything more than a sedentary position.").)
The plaintiff also argues that she is entitled to lost wages due for periods of "six to eight" weeks during her recoveries from her three ankle surgeries due to what the plaintiff describes as testimony from Dr. Ferrucci noting that she would be unable to perform even sedentary work during these periods. (See ECF No. 75 at 7 (citing Tr. Ex. 11S at 84.).) There are multiple problems with this argument. As an initial matter, Dr. Ferrucci's testimony does not support it. The question and response the plaintiff cites are as follows:
(Tr. Ex. 11S at 84.) Dr. Ferrucci's response suggests that the plaintiff was capable of performing sedentary work for six to eight weeks after her ankle surgeries and, in any event, he does not say she was incapable of working at all during those periods. In addition, Dr. Joy concluded that the plaintiff had suffered from near total disability since the plane crash due to the combined effect of her injuries (see Tr. Ex. 21B at 12-13 (averring that plaintiff was entitled to lost earning capacity for all of the time since the plane crash minus the wages she earned in a failed work attempt in February, 2012)); he also noted that the Social Security Administration had determined that the plaintiff was disabled in 2012. (Id. at 13.) As such, it seems doubtful that the plaintiff would have been able to perform any sort of work after her ankle surgeries in late 2012, 2013, and 2015 but for her recovery from these surgeries. In other words, even assuming the injuries the Court found to be compensable would have prevented her from working during these intervals, she failed to prove that those injuries—as opposed to other, non-compensable injuries or conditions—were the "but-for" cause of her inability to work during these periods.
I therefore reject the plaintiff's argument that she is entitled to greater damages for lost earnings capacity. In light of this disposition, I conclude that the plaintiff is entitled to an extra $14,367.62 in economic damages, bringing her total economic damages award to
For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiff's motion to amend the judgment (ECF No. 75) is hereby GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. The Court amends the judgment in favor of the plaintiff to
IT IS SO ORDERED.