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Stevens v. Bangor and Aroostook, 96-1134 (1996)

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit Number: 96-1134 Visitors: 19
Filed: Oct. 09, 1996
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary:  Robert, 832 F.2d at 6.There is evidence in this case that, plaintiff had a pre-existing injury or, condition which existed prior to February, 19, 1994. Indeed, FELA and other federal statutes incorporate the, eggshell skull rule to prevent defendant from avoiding, liability in certain cases.
USCA1 Opinion









United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
____________________


No. 96-1134

DAVID D. STEVENS,

Plaintiff, Appellee,

v.

BANGOR AND AROOSTOOK RAILROAD COMPANY,

Defendant, Appellant.


____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

[Hon. Eugene W. Beaulieu, U.S. Magistrate Judge] _____________________

____________________

Before

Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

Cyr and Lynch, Circuit Judges. ______________

____________________

Jeffrey T. Edwards, with whom Elizabeth J. Wyman and Preti, __________________ __________________ ______
Flaherty, Beliveau & Pachios, Portland, ME, were on brief, for _____________________________
appellant.
Robert M. Byrne, Jr., with whom Thornton Early & Naumes, _____________________ _________________________
Boston, MA, and Craig J. Rancourt, Biddeford, ME, were on brief, _________________
for appellee.

____________________

October 9, 1996
____________________




















LYNCH, Circuit Judge. David Stevens, a railway LYNCH, Circuit Judge. ______________

trackman with sixteen years of service at the Bangor &

Aroostook Railroad Company, suffered back injuries from an

accident on the job. The jury in his Federal Employers'

Liability Act action awarded him $450,000.1 The Railroad

appeals from the verdict and the denial of its motion for a

new trial, saying the evidence showed neither negligence nor

foreseeability and that certain evidentiary rulings were in

error.

The Railroad raises two issues of weight. It

argues it was unfairly prejudiced by the exclusion of

evidence of a cardiac event suffered by plaintiff two weeks

before trial. It also argues that the court erred in

instructing the jury that, while defendant was responsible

only for the aggravation of a pre-existing condition, the

jury must find for plaintiff if it could not separate the

injury caused by the condition from that caused by the

accident. These health-related issues require us to address

questions not resolved before now in this Circuit. We

affirm, though with some sympathy for the tribulations faced

by trial counsel.

I.




____________________

1. The jury found the Railroad responsible for 90% of
Stevens' injuries; Stevens responsible for 10%.

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The jury could reasonably have believed the facts

to be as follows:

On a winter morning in northern Maine, February 19,

1994, there was a train derailment on the main line to the

Millinocket Yard of the Railroad. The derailment tore up

some tracks, which had to be repaired promptly. The

Millinocket Yard is an important junction point, and the oil

tank cars that fuel the local industry travel along its main

line.

David Stevens, a trackman and machine operator,

arrived at the yard around 7 a.m. at the request of his

foreman. Stevens' job involved heavy manual labor, and that

morning he helped repair the consequences of the derailment.

After clearing away torn rail and scrap metal, Stevens and a

co-worker, David Ireland, were asked to get lengths of rail

to repair the damaged track.

The rail was kept in the X-198 railcar, known as

the "wreck car." Different weights of thirty-nine foot

lengths of rail were piled in the car,2 some lying on their

sides, some on their bases. The rails were in disarray,

piled to a height of about two to three feet above the base

of the car. Their surface was uneven and there were


____________________

2. The "weight" of a rail is the weight in pounds of a three
foot section. This car had varying lengths of 100 pound, 112
pound, and 115 pound rail, each of which has a somewhat
different shape and size.

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irregular gaps between the pieces of rail. In violation of

the Railroad's own safety rules, the wreck car had been

loaded using inappropriate equipment and had not been

blocked, thus leading to the gaps between the rails.

Stevens' task was to climb onto the rails in the

wreck car and position the rails so that his co-worker,

Ireland, operating a machine called a pettibone, could secure

the rail with the pettibone's tongs. Stevens first shoveled

snow and ice off the portion of the wreck car where he needed

to work. The two men then successfully offloaded six rails,

with Ireland operating the pettibone in response to Stevens'

hand signals. Then Stevens, standing atop the rails in the

wreck car, reached up for the tongs of the pettibone to guide

it down to the seventh rail. He slipped and fell. His right

leg, up to his groin, went down a gap in the rails. He

twisted as he fell and felt a sharp pain in his back. With

difficulty and great pain, he extricated himself. Declining

co-workers' offers to take him to the hospital and wanting to

earn the $20 an hour overtime pay, Stevens continued working

for eighteen more hours.

When he went home, the pain continued, as it did

when he returned to work on February 25, 1994. On February

28, unable to continue working due to the pain, he went to

the hospital. He was first diagnosed with lumbar strain, but

when physical therapy did not improve his condition, his



-4- 4













orthopedic surgeon ordered an MRI, which showed early

degenerative disk disease and some narrowing of the disks.

He has since been in physical and occupational therapy,

unable to return to his job because his back pain disables

him from physical labor. Jobs in his area of Maine are few

and far between, particularly once employment requiring heavy

manual labor is excluded. Stevens, who is married and has

children, works sporadically as an animal control officer at

about $75 a week and earns small sums as the owner of a

delivery truck.

Before Stevens' accident, the Railroad had at times

loaded the rails onto transport cars in a regular tiered

fashion. The Railroad had decided even before the accident

to switch to this system for the wreck car because it would

be more efficient. It would also be safer because it would

be easier for the pettibone operator to grab the rails and so

reduce the need for a trackman to climb onto the rails to

guide the pettibone's tongs.

II.

Sufficiency of the Evidence and New Trial Motion ________________________________________________

The Federal Employers' Liability Act was enacted in

1908 to provide railroad workers with a federal remedy for

personal injuries suffered as a result of the negligence of

their employers or fellow workers. Consolidated Rail Corp. _______________________

v. Gottshall, 114 S. Ct. 2396, 2404 (1994); Robert v. _________ ______



-5- 5













Consolidated Rail Corp., 832 F.2d 3, 5-6 (1st Cir. 1987) _________________________

(citing Atchison T. & S.F. R.R. v. Buell, 480 U.S. 557, 561 ________________________ _____

(1987)). FELA is a broad remedial statute and has been

liberally construed to effectuate the congressional intent of

protecting railroad employees. Id. (citing Sinkler v. ___ _______

Missouri Pac. R.R., 356 U.S. 326, 330 (1958)). The standard ___________________

for liability under FELA is low, although the statute does

not impose absolute liability on employers. Moody v. Boston _____ ______

& Maine Corp., 921 F.2d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1990). _____________

A FELA plaintiff must prove the traditional common

law elements of negligence -- duty, breach, damages,

causation, and foreseeability. Robert, 832 F.2d at 6. ______

Specifically, he must show that his employer breached its

duty to maintain a safe workplace, that he was harmed by that

breach, and that the harm was foreseeable. The employer's

duty to maintain a safe workplace does not require all

dangers to be eradicated, but it does demand the elimination

of those that can reasonably be avoided in light of the

normal requirements of the job. Conway v. Consolidated Rail ______ _________________

Corp., 720 F.2d 221, 223 (1st Cir. 1983), cert. denied, 466 _____ _____________

U.S. 937 (1984). FELA provides that railroad employers are

liable for injuries to their employees "resulting in whole or __

in part" from the employer's negligence. 45 U.S.C. 51 ________

(emphasis added); see also Robert, 832 F.2d at 6 ("[U]nder ___ ____ ______





-6- 6













FELA negligent employers cannot escape liability merely

because other causes contribute to the injury.").

Measured against these standards, the evidence was

sufficient to impose liability. The Railroad argues that

there was no negligence on its part causing Stevens to slip

and no way for it to foresee that Stevens would be injured.

Neither the challenge to the sufficiency of the

evidence nor the appeal from the denial of the new trial

motion is well taken.

Stevens was injured when he fell into a gap between

the rails created by their haphazard arrangement in the wreck

car. The disarray also increased the number of times the

trackman had to climb atop the rails in the wreck car to help

the pettibone operator, thus making it more likely a worker

would fall and slip into a gap between the rails. Although

Stevens had cleared away the ice and snow from the area where

he was working, it was certainly foreseeable that, given the

uncertain footing underneath, a trackman would fall. It was

also foreseeable that on falling, he would slip into a gap

and be injured or suffer greater injuries than he otherwise

would have. Stevens has proffered more than enough to meet

his burden.

Subsequent Remedial Measures ____________________________

The Railroad claims that two items of evidence -- a

post-accident photograph of a wreck car whose rails are



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arranged in a tiered fashion, and references to comments made

at a company safety meeting following the accident -- were

admitted into evidence in violation of Fed. R. Evid. 407,

which prohibits the introduction of a defendant's subsequent

remedial measures.

We doubt that Rule 407 applies at all here. As to

the photograph showing a car with the rails arranged in

tiers,3 the jury was told only that it depicted an

arrangement of the type Stevens had seen on other cars on

which he had worked before his accident. The jury was not

informed of the date of the photograph and was not told that

it portrayed a subsequent remedial measure. The photograph

was properly admitted to show the Railroad's past practice

and standard of care.

The jury also did not know that the challenged

references to statements by Mr. Cote, the Railroad's

roadmaster, concerned statements made during a post-accident

safety meeting. The references to Cote's statements were

supported by notes taken by one of the Railroad's foremen,

Thomas Bell.4 The jury never saw the notes, and the

____________________

3. The photograph was a fair representation of rails aligned
in a row, same sides up, which Stevens had walked on in other
cars prior to the accident. It showed a different, less
dangerous alignment than the alignment in the wreck car on
which he was injured.

4. The notes said that, "Rails still coming in from Derby
on supply cars a mess rails every which way and Holes in the
floor of car . . . . RNC [Robert N. Cote] mentioned [time of

-8- 8













references to Cote's statements were admitted for impeachment

purposes only. Cote had testified that he had never stated

the rails on the wreck car were in disarray at the time of

the plaintiff's accident and that he remembered the rails as

having been arranged neatly. His later statement about the

condition of the rails at the time of the accident could be

understood to be to the contrary and was thus fair game.

Thus, because the evidence was not presented to the

jury directly or by inference as subsequent remedial

measures, Rule 407 does not apply. Even if Rule 407 applied,

the exception within the rule would also apply:

This rule does not require the exclusion
of evidence of subsequent measures when
offered for another purpose, such as
proving ownership, control, or
feasibility of precautionary measures, if
controverted, or impeachment.

This evidence fell within the exception. These two rulings

fell well within the sound discretion of the trial judge.

See Blinzler v. Marriott Int'l, Inc., 81 F.3d 1148, 1158 (1st ___ ________ ____________________

Cir. 1996); Roy v. Star Chopper Co., 584 F.2d 1124, 1134 (1st ___ ________________

Cir. 1978), cert. denied, 440 U.S. 916 (1979). ____________

Cardiac Event _____________

Two weeks before trial and two and a half weeks

after the jury was impanelled, Stevens was hospitalized on

November 11, 1995. Stevens was diagnosed with a threatened


____________________

Stevens' accident] as an example."

-9- 9













anterior septal myocardial infarction5 and was released on

November 14, 1995. The parties agreed that the cardiac event

was not caused in any way by Stevens' accident or consequent

injuries.

The Railroad was not permitted to cross-examine

Stevens about his cardiac event or to introduce the medical

records into evidence. The Railroad argued that such

examination was pertinent to Stevens' life and work

expectancy. The court excluded all evidence about the

cardiac event because the Railroad failed to proffer expert

testimony to link it to life expectancy or work expectancy.

Absent such testimony the court felt that the evidence would

have been speculative and unduly prejudicial. The trial

court also excluded the evidence in part based on its

understanding "that any independent event that the defendant

is not responsible for in reference to his health and

condition could not be considered by [the jury] for purposes

of awarding damages."

This latter basis for the trial court's ruling was

erroneous. If post-accident health problems have an impact

on a plaintiff's ability to work or on his life expectancy

and arise independently of the accident, defendant is

entitled to adduce evidence of such problems in an effort to


____________________

5. An impending heart attack was averted by treatment at the
hospital.

-10- 10













reduce a potential damages award. In FELA cases plaintiff

must prove pre-injury and post-injury earning potential.

Quinones-Pacheco v. American Airlines, 979 F.2d 1, 6-7 (1st ________________ _________________

Cir. 1992). As the Sixth Circuit held in a FELA case, Harris ______

v. Illinois Cent. R.R., 58 F.3d 1140 (6th Cir. 1995): ___________________

If [plaintiff] had died in 1992 of a
heart attack unrelated to his fall at
work, the period for which his estate
could recover lost earnings would have
been cut off at the point of death. See ___
Dixon v. International Harvester Co., 754 ____________________________________
F.2d 573, 588-90 (5th Cir. 1985). If his
heart condition would have rendered him
incapable of working as a carman,
similarly, we think it would be error to
allow testimony on his potential earnings
as a carman beyond the point at which his
work as a carman would have had to cease
even if he had never injured his leg and
back.

Id. at 1144-45; accord Agosto v. Trusswal Sys. Corp., 142 ___ ______ ______ ____________________

F.R.D. 118, 120 (E.D. Pa. 1992); Smith v. Southland Corp., _____ _______________

738 F. Supp. 923, 926 (E.D. Pa. 1990).

That does not mean the trial judge erred in

excluding the evidence, particularly in light of his

alternative grounds for doing so. A decision to exclude

evidence is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Blinzler, 81 ________

F.3d at 1158. Here, the Railroad commendably concedes that

in the ordinary course, evidence of unrelated post-accident

health problems without medical testimony as to their effect

on plaintiff's life and work expectancy would be unduly

speculative. See, e.g., Meller v. Heil Co., 745 F.2d 1297, _________ ______ ________



-11- 11













1303 (10th Cir.) (excluding evidence of the decedent's drug

use in a wrongful death action in part due to the absence of

a medical foundation for the defendant's claim that the

decedent's life expectancy would have been diminished by his

drug use), cert. denied, 467 U.S. 1206 (1984). The Railroad ____________

says that it did not have enough time to develop such

testimony, that the court denied its motion for a

continuance,6 and that the exclusion was therefore error.

Although close, we find no abuse of discretion in

light of three factors. First, the timing, while difficult,

was far from impossible. The Railroad acknowledges that it

received notification of the plaintiff's myocardial event at

least ten days before the trial was scheduled to begin.

Nothing prevented the defendant from starting to look for an

expert witness at that time. The Railroad was promptly given

the medical records, and it interviewed the attending

physician. The defendant did not begin to put on its case

until December 4, effectively giving it over two weeks

(albeit subject to the Thanksgiving holiday weekend), to

locate an expert witness.



____________________

6. The Railroad's request for a continuance was based on its
representation that it needed to investigate the issue
further. The court denied the continuance based on that
representation and directed plaintiff's counsel to give the
defense all the medical information it had. The hospital
records were promptly provided. No specific request was made
for a continuance in order to locate an expert witness.

-12- 12













Second, there is very little evidence establishing

prejudice to the Railroad. There was no offer of proof as to

what a potential cardiologist expert witness would say to

link the cardiac event causally to the legal issues. We are

left not knowing whether there is, in fact, any colorable

claim of linkage. There is not even a clear record of when

the Railroad first received the hospital records or what

steps it took in response, although at oral argument both

counsel attempted to recreate the sequence from memory.

Third, during the trial, well after it received

notice of the plaintiff's cardiac event, the Railroad entered

into a stipulation based on mortality tables as to the life

and work expectancy of a typical man of plaintiff's age who

was of average health. The jury was instructed that it could

consider the stipulation along with other evidence. In the

face of the stipulation and the absence of even a proffer to

link the cardiac event to plaintiff's life and work

expectancy, it was hardly an abuse of discretion for the

court to exclude the evidence.

Vocational Testimony ____________________

Similarly, we reject the challenge to the testimony

of plaintiff's vocational expert. The Railroad says the

testimony lacked adequate factual basis and complains that it

was sandbagged when, on cross-examination, it learned for the

first time that the expert had updated her research just



-13- 13













before and during the trial in violation of a pre-trial

scheduling order (and, although not mentioned by the

defendant, of Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(e)(1) as well). A trial

court has wide discretion in determining the admissibility of

expert testimony, and we will reverse its decision only when

there has been a clear abuse of discretion. Allied Int'l, _____________

Inc. v. International Longshoreman's Ass'n., 814 F.2d 32, 40 ____ ____________________________________

(1st Cir.), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 820 (1987). ____________

The expert's vocational evaluation report was based

on her review of the plaintiff's medical records and prior

work experience, a meeting with the plaintiff during which

they discussed his skills and interests, and her review of

jobs available in the area. The expert testified that the

information she relied upon was the sort typically used by

persons in her field. The Railroad made no proffer that

vocational experts rely on different types of information

than did plaintiff's expert. We think the foundation laid

was adequate.

As to the expert's last minute research and the

lack of notice to the Railroad, this is a trial management

issue within the trial court's discretion. The trial judge

recognized that the expert adhered to the same opinions which

had been timely disclosed to the Railroad. The court quite

properly offered to instruct the jury that it should

disregard any information the expert acquired after



-14- 14













submitting her report. The Railroad did not take the trial

court up on this offer and did not ask for additional time

before continuing cross-examination. There was no abuse in

the ruling that the violation of the pre-trial scheduling

order did not warrant striking the expert's entire testimony.

Jury Instructions _________________

The Railroad's final claim is that the trial court

improperly instructed the jury on the issue of damages and

that this was sufficiently prejudicial, based on the record

as a whole, to warrant a reversal of the judgment. The

question, one of first impression for this court, is which

side should prevail on this issue in a FELA action when there

is adequate expert testimony that an accident aggravated a

pre-existing condition7 but the jury cannot separate the pain

or disability caused by the pre-existing condition from that

resulting from the accident. We believe that the balance

tips in favor of compensating the FELA plaintiff, and so

uphold the jury instructions.

Ample evidence was presented at trial that Stevens

suffered from degenerative disk disease prior to his February

1994 accident. There was also testimony that degenerative


____________________

7. This case does not involve the problem of the
admissibility of the expert's testimony if the expert is
unable to ascertain whether the trauma of the accident would
exacerbate a prior condition of this particular patient. Cf. ___
Rotman v. National R.R. Passenger Corp., No. 95-P-277, 1996 ______ _____________________________
W.L. 528878 (Mass. App. Ct. Sept. 18, 1996).

-15- 15













disk disease is a process of aging. However, Stevens

presented expert testimony that the accident caused an

aggravation of his pre-existing condition. His treating

physician testified that, while "there must have been some

degenerative disk disease present" before the accident, "it

was silent[,] [s]o he did not feel anything," and that the

accident caused him to feel the condition for the first time.

There was also evidence, however, that plaintiff had

experienced back pain prior to the accident.

The trial judge instructed the jury as follows:

There is evidence in this case that
plaintiff had a pre-existing injury or
condition which existed prior to February
19, 1994. The railroad is only liable
for damages you find to be caused by the
occurrence of February 19, 1994. If you
find that plaintiff's pre-existing
condition made him more susceptible to
injury than a person in good health, the
defendant is responsible for all injuries
suffered by the plaintiff as a result of
the defendant's negligence, even if those
injuries are greater than would have been
suffered by a person in good health under
the same circumstances.
If you find that defendant
negligently caused further injury or
aggravation to plaintiff's pre-existing
condition, plaintiff is entitled to
compensation for all of plaintiff's
damages caused by the incident, including
that further injury or aggravation. If
you cannot separate the pain or
disability caused by the pre-existing
condition from that caused by the
occurrence of February 19, 1994, then the
defendant is liable for all of
plaintiff's injuries.




-16- 16













The defendant takes issue with the last sentence. However,

the instructions correctly stated the law.

It is true that as a general matter, when a

defendant's negligence aggravates a plaintiff's pre-existing

health condition, the defendant is liable only for the

additional increment caused by the negligence and not for the

pain and impairment that the plaintiff would have suffered

even if the accident had never occurred. See, e.g., Evans v. _________ _____

United Arab Shipping Co., 790 F. Supp. 516, 519 (D.N.J. __________________________

1992), aff'd, 4 F.3d 207 (3d Cir. 1993); cf. Shupe v. New _____ ___ _____ ___

York Cent. Sys., 339 F.2d 998, 1000 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, _______________ ____________

381 U.S. 937 (1965). Contrary to the defendant's premise,

the jury was so instructed here. But that general statement

of law does not provide a complete response to the question

of which party prevails when the harm due to the pre-existing

condition is inseparable from the harm due to the accident.

We turn first to the language of the FELA, which

tends to favor the plaintiff but which is not dispositive.

Section 1 of FELA states: "[Defendant] shall be liable in

damages . . . resulting in whole or in part from the ____________

negligence of [defendant, its agents, or employees]." 45

U.S.C. 51 (emphasis added). This language suggests, as the

jury instruction indicated, that once the plaintiff puts

forth credible evidence of causation -- that the Railroad's

negligence has aggravated a pre-existing condition -- the



-17- 17













defendant will be liable for damages even if the jury cannot

separate the amount of harm caused by the accident from the

amount of harm caused by the pre-existing condition.

However, the statutory language does not provide explicit

instructions about the appropriate apportionment of damages

when the causes of plaintiff's disability are inseparable.

More helpful is a consideration of the primary

statutory purpose: "to eliminate a number of traditional

defenses to tort liability and to facilitate recovery in

meritorious cases." Atchison T. & S.F. R.R. v. Buell, 480 ________________________ _____

U.S. 557, 561 (1987). "Specifically, the statute abolished

the fellow servant rule, rejected the doctrine of

contributory negligence in favor of that of comparative

negligence, and prohibited employers from exempting

themselves from FELA through contract; a 1939 amendment

abolished the assumption of risk defense." Gottshall, 114 S. _________

Ct. at 2404. Allowing a defendant to escape liability

because of the jury's inability to separate the disability

due to plaintiff's pre-existing condition from that due to

the accident would prevent the plaintiff from recovering

damages for the aggravation in what the factfinder has

determined to be a meritorious case. This would defeat the

remedial purpose of the statute.8

____________________

8. Indeed, FELA and other federal statutes incorporate the
"eggshell skull" rule to prevent defendant from avoiding
liability in certain cases. See, e.g., Jordan v. Atchison, _________ ______ _________

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When the statutory language and purpose are not

dispositive, "[t]he third resort of puzzled courts is to

policy, principally the policy Congress was seeking to

implement in adopting the statute." Wilson v. Bradlees, No. ______ ________

95-2293, 1996 WL 534913, at *4 (1st Cir. Sept. 25, 1996).

While we are aware that FELA interpretation is a matter of

federal law, the Act is founded on common law concepts

subject to explicit statutory qualifications. Id. It is ___

therefore appropriate to look to the Restatement of Torts for ____________________

guidance on the relevant policy issues, as indeed the Supreme

Court and the courts of appeals have done in the past. See, ____

e.g., Gallick v. Baltimore & O. R.R., 372 U.S. 108, 120 ____ _______ _____________________

(1963); Buckley v. Metro-North Commuter R.R., 79 F.3d 1337, _______ _________________________

1346 (2d Cir. 1996); Lockard v. Missouri Pac. R.R., 894 F.2d _______ __________________

299, 305 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 847 (1990). ____________

The Restatement provides some assistance in its ___________

discussion of apportionment of indivisible damages,

explaining:



____________________

T. & S.F. Ry., 934 F.2d 225, 228-29 (9th Cir. 1991) (FELA ______________
case noting that it is a well-settled principle of tort law
that the defendant must take the plaintiff as it finds him);
cf. Avitia v. Metropolitan Club of Chicago, 49 F.3d 1219, ___ ______ ______________________________
1227-28 (7th Cir. 1995) (same under Fair Labor Standards
Act); Doty v. Sewall, 908 F.2d 1053, 1059 (1st Cir. 1990) ____ ______
(same under Landrum-Griffin Act). And the principle that
indivisible harm results in imposing full liability on
defendants is recognized in other areas of federal law as
well. See, e.g., Price v. United States Navy, 39 F.3d 1011, _________ _____ __________________
1018 (9th Cir. 1994) (CERCLA).

-19- 19













Where two or more causes combine to
produce such a single result, incapable
of division on any logical or reasonable
basis . . . the courts have refused to
make an arbitrary apportionment . . . and
each of the causes is charged with
responsibility for the entire harm.

Restatement (Second) of Torts 433A(2) cmt. i, at 439 _______________________________

(1965). Thus, a defendant gets the benefit of apportionment

of harm only if "there is a reasonable basis for determining

the contribution of each cause to a single harm." Id. ___

433A(1)(b), at 434. If not, the defendant is liable for the

whole. According to 433A, both the defendant's negligence

and the plaintiff's pre-existing condition are deemed the

cause of the entire harm, thus imposing the burden of the

whole on both. But this tie is broken by the congressional

intent to implement a policy benefitting injured railway

workers.9

An additional policy argument that supports

upholding the jury instruction may be found in the

Restatement's discussion of the related question of who has ___________


____________________

9. The illustrations for the above quoted Restatement ___________
comments are primarily taken from cases involving multiple
tortfeasors. However, the Restatement indicates that "[s]uch ___________
entire liability is imposed where some of the causes are
innocent . . . ." Id. 433A(2) cmt. i, at 439; cf. id. app. ___ ___ ___
at 140 (1966) (noting that "as to an original injury followed
by negligent treatment," the treating physician "is liable
only for the aggravation he has caused"). The instant case
is closely analogous, and the parallel between aggravation of
a pre-existing condition and the harm caused by multiple
tortfeasors has been drawn by several courts. See, e.g., __________
Lovely v. Allstate Ins. Co., 658 A.2d 1091, 1092 (Me. 1995). ______ _________________

-20- 20













the burden as to apportionment of damages when such an

apportionment is possible:10

The reason for the exceptional rule
placing the burden of proof as to
apportionment upon the defendant or
defendants is the injustice of allowing a
proved wrongdoer . . . to escape
liability . . . . In such a case the
defendant may justly be required to
assume the burden of producing that
evidence, or if he is not able to do so,
of bearing the full responsibility.

Id. 433B(2) cmt. d, at 444.11 The comment concludes, "As ___

between the proved tortfeasor who has clearly caused some

harm, and the entirely innocent plaintiff, any hardship . . .

should fall upon the former." Id. ___

____________________

10. At trial, defendant asked for a jury instruction
indicating that if the causes of plaintiff's injuries were
separable, plaintiff had the burden of proof on the extent to
which the accident caused the aggravation of the pre-existing
condition. Because this case involves an instruction on
indivisible injuries, we need not decide the question of who
bears the burden as to aggravation of a pre-existing
condition when the damages are separable. However, to the
extent that the Railroad is contending that plaintiff bears
the entire burden of proving damages, we note that this
argument is undercut by the statutory scheme, which makes
comparative negligence an affirmative defense. But cf. Dale _______ ____
v. Baltimore & O. R.R., 552 A.2d 1037, 1041 (Pa. 1989) (in ____________________
FELA case, it was error to instruct jury that "if it found
the railroad negligent, the railroad was responsible for the
entirety of damages, whether or not its negligence caused
those damages in whole or in part," because implicit in the
comparative negligence scheme is the principle that defendant
is only liable to the extent that its negligence causes harm,
whether the other causes are the employee's own negligence or
a pre-existing health condition).

11. The rule placing the burden as to apportionment on the
defendant has also been adopted by at least one court
interpreting a similar federal statute. Maurer v. United ______ ______
States, 668 F.2d 98, 100 (2d Cir. 1981) (Public Vessels Act). ______

-21- 21













The primary policy argument against shifting the

burden of proving apportionment to defendant is that

plaintiff is in the better position to prove what portion of

his injuries was caused by the accident. LaMoreaux v. Totem _________ _____

Ocean Trailer Express, Inc., 632 P.2d 539, 545 (Alaska 1981). ___________________________

However, given discovery of medical records and the

availability of medical examinations of plaintiff by

defendant's doctor, Fed. R. Civ. P. 35, it is not unfair to

place on defendant that burden and the consequences of not

meeting it.

We therefore think the better rule, particularly in

light of FELA's broad remedial purposes, is that if the

factfinder cannot separate injuries caused or exacerbated by

the accident from those resulting from a pre-existing

condition, the defendant is liable for all such injuries.12

Affirmed.












____________________

12. Cf. Varhol v. National R.R. Passenger Corp., 909 F.2d ___ ______ ______________________________
1557, 1564 (7th Cir. 1990) (upholding use of interrogatories
asking jury "to determine what portion of [plaintiff's]
condition . . . resulted from the [accident], and, if it _____
could determine that portion, to take it into account in ______________________________
determining damages" (emphasis added)).

-22- 22






Source:  CourtListener

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