PER CURIAM.
In this verbal threshold case, defendant Paulo Alede appeals from a jury verdict following a trial on damages. Defendant contends that errors in the jury charge as well as the trial judge's exclusion of plaintiff's thirteen-year-old conviction on a weapons offense deprived him of a fair trial. Because the judge did not abuse her discretion in barring evidence of the conviction and the instructions, read as a whole, correctly set forth the law as applied to the issues in the case, we affirm.
Plaintiff was rear-ended by a car driven by defendant in November 2008. Liability was stipulated and the case went to trial on damages only. In the course of picking a jury, a person ultimately seated as Juror #6 asked a question at sidebar about damages. The judge responded by advising her that "You will be instructed if you are selected as a juror." The judge added that "you and the other jurors would have to come up with a number that you think it would cost to live his daily life as he would have before the injury." Neither lawyer objected to this incorrect statement of the law and neither moved to strike the juror.
Plaintiff presented the testimony of his treating chiropractor, Dr. Iuzzolino, and a physiatrist, Dr. Parvez, who examined him for purposes of the litigation. Dr. Iuzzolino testified that he had treated plaintiff for permanent injuries to his neck and back following a car accident in 2006 in which plaintiff had suffered a disc herniation at C5-6. The doctor described the six months of treatment he provided plaintiff following the 2008 accident at issue in the trial and, following an objection and rephrasing of the question, the results of diagnostic tests he recommended, including an MRI and EMG. Consistent with his report provided to defendant in discovery, Dr. Iuzzolino testified that plaintiff had suffered a permanent injury in the 2008 accident which exacerbated the injuries received in the 2006 accident.
Dr. Parvez testified, via videotape, to the series of epidural injections plaintiff underwent to his neck and low back following the 2008 accident and the results of his MRI and EMG studies. Dr. Parvez testified that she was provided the reports of those studies as well as the studies themselves, all of which she reviewed. Although defendant objected to the doctor testifying to the conclusions of the non-testifying doctors who had performed those studies, the trial judge ruled that Dr. Parvez was appropriately making use of their findings as a basis for explaining her own opinions to the jury. Dr. Parvez agreed with the radiologist who performed the MRI following the 2008 accident, Dr. Chess, that plaintiff had a disc herniation at L4-L5, a disc bulge at L5-S1, and a herniation at C5-C6 impinging on the thecal sac. She likewise agreed that the EMG/nerve conduction studies showed evidence of radiculopathy at L4-L5 and C5-C6. In her report, Dr. Parvez noted that plaintiff appeared to have a pre-existing condition relating to his cervical spine. She also testified that plaintiff had suffered a permanent injury in the 2008 accident.
Defendant presented the expert testimony of Dr. Blank, an orthopedist. Dr. Blank acknowledged abnormalities in plaintiff's spine but opined that these were caused by degenerative disc disease and not traumatic disc injury. The doctor also noted that plaintiff had suffered neck and back injuries in the prior accident in 2006. Dr. Blank acknowledged a "small disc herniation or protrusion at C5-6" visible on the study from 2006 which he found had become smaller on the study following the 2008 accident. When asked on cross-examination whether he agreed with the radiologist's findings from 2006, Dr. Blank answered, without objection, that he "pretty much agreed" with the findings from 2006, namely that plaintiff had a herniation at C5-6, but noted that while he thought the herniation was caused by degeneration, the 2006 report was silent as to the presence or absence of degeneration. Dr. Blank testified, again without objection, that he disagreed with Dr. Chess's findings with regard to the MRI performed following the 2008 accident.
At the charge conference, plaintiff asked that the judge give the standard charge on aggravation.
When the instructions were read, the judge omitted, apparently inadvertently, the Medical Expenses charge. Further, in reading the Life Expectancy charge,
The jury determined that plaintiff sustained a permanent injury in the accident and returned a verdict in his favor of $225,000. The jury did not award his wife any damages on her per quod claim. The court denied defendant's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. This appeal followed.
Defendant raises the following issues:
It is, of course, axiomatic that an appropriate and proper jury charge is essential to a fair trial.
Reviewing this charge as a whole, we find no basis for reversal. First, we note that trial counsel for defendant did not object to the charge as given. Accordingly, we review only for plain error, that is, error clearly capable of producing an unjust result.
Defendant's complaints about the failure to give the Medical Expenses charge and the court's inclusion of future medical expenses and future earnings in the Life Expectancy charge clearly fall within this latter category. The charge the court gave on damages, which closely tracked the model charge, was, on the whole, an accurate statement of the law applicable to this case. Defendant cannot argue to the contrary. No testimony was presented on either medical expenses or future earnings. The judge advised the jury that "[i]n this case[,] Mr. Boxton is seeking the damages of pain, suffering, disability, impairment, and loss of enjoyment of life." Defendant's contention that the jury's verdict should be reversed for such slight errors is clearly without merit.
We likewise reject defendant's argument as to Juror #6. Experienced trial counsel for defendant did not make any objection to the trial judge's admittedly incorrect statement of the law during the sidebar colloquy with this potential juror. Counsel did not seek to strike the juror or challenge her for cause. Trial counsel likewise did not raise this issue in his JNOV motion.
The judge advised the juror at sidebar that she and the other jurors would be instructed on damages at the end of the case. At the end of the case, the judge delivered an extensive charge on damages that closely tracked the model charge and clearly and accurately set forth the applicable law. There is no reason to think that the juror failed to follow the instructions given. We cannot find that the trial judge committed plain error by allowing Juror #6 as part of the jury selected to hear this case.
Defendant argues that the judge's failure to give
Further, unlike in
The trial judge's decision to charge aggravation was also not error in light of the testimony adduced at trial. Although plaintiff's prior disc herniation was acknowledged by both plaintiff's and defendant's experts, plaintiff claimed that he was asymptomatic prior to the 2008 accident. A plaintiff not alleging aggravation of a pre-existing condition is not obligated to produce a comparative analysis as part of his prima facie case in order to vault the verbal threshold.
Here, both sides elicited testimony at trial regarding plaintiff's prior disc herniation. While Dr. Parvez testified that she could not compare the condition of plaintiff's back before and after the accident as she had not been provided the 2006 MRI study, Dr. Iuzzolino testified that the 2008 accident exacerbated plaintiff's prior injury. Defendant's expert Dr. Blank compared the size of the herniation at C5-6 before and after the 2008 accident and testified that the herniation had become smaller because of degenerative changes occurring in plaintiff's back. Accordingly, given the testimony, the trial judge was correct to charge aggravation as both parties included it in the facts and theories presented at trial.
We likewise find no error in the judge's exclusion of defendant's thirteen-year-old weapons conviction. A trial judge's discretionary evidentiary rulings are accorded substantial deference on appeal.
The few small and inconsequential errors which occurred during the course of this trial do not amount to cumulative error justifying overturning the jury's verdict.
Affirmed.