Title: Impact Evidence Admissibility Update
1Impact Evidence Admissibility Update
- Honorable Joseph R. Slights, III
2Davis v. Maute, 770 A.2d 36 (Del. 2001)
- Background
- In opening statements at trial, Mautes counsel
described the automobile accident as a
fender-bender - Offered photographs into evidence that showed
minimal damage to the plaintiffs car. - Did not offer expert testimony to corroborate the
argument that slight property damage was
suggestive of minimal physical injuries. (Id. at
39)
3Davis v. Maute, 770 A.2d 36 (Del. 2001)
- Court Rules
- Counsels arguments
- In general, when there is an absence of expert
testimony, counsel may not argue there is a
correlation between the extent of damage to
automobiles in an accident and the extent of the
occupants personal injuries caused by the
accident. (770 A.2d at 38) - Must present competent expert testimony to
support the argument. (Id. at 40 n.3) - And counsel may not argue by implication what
counsel may not argue directly. (Id. at 40) - Photographs
- Admissibility of photographs falls under the
Delaware Rules of Evidence 403 test. If the risk
to the jury of an improper inference
substantially outweighs the probative value,
they are inadmissible. (Id. at 41) - If the photographs are admissible, the jury must
be instructed that there is no evidence of a
correlation between the damage shown in the
photographs and the severity of the partys
personal injuries. (Id. at 42)
4Eskin v. Cardin, 842 A.2d 1222 (Del. 2004)
- Davis does not hold that photographs of the
vehicles involved in an accident may never be
admitted without expert testimony about the
significance of the damage to the vehicles shown
in the accident and how that damage may relate to
an issue in the case. - Davis has been misinterpreted as a bar to the
admission of photographs without expert
testimony. It was only the disingenuous reference
to a fender bender-after a trial judge's
express ruling forbidding what that phrase
implied-that prompted our holding. - Davis should not be construed broadly to require
expert testimony in every case in order for
jurors to be permitted to view photographs of
vehicles involved in an accident. - In short, Davis should be limited to its facts,
recognizing that there may be many helpful
purposes for admitting photographs of the
vehicles involved in an accident where the case
does not require supporting expert opinion.
5Eskin v. Cardin cont.
- With respect to proffered expert testimony, the
trial judge could properly conclude that there
was a danger that the jury would be confused or
misled into believing that Carden fell within the
field's one-size-fits-all statistical range. - Trial court properly excluded biomechanical
expert who failed to take into account the
plaintiffs unique medical history in formulating
his
6Dunn v. Riley, 864 A.2d 905 (Del. 2004)
- Defendants reference to minor impact did not
open the door for plaintiff to introduce evidence
of cost of repairs to her vehicle (which
presumably would infer more substantial impact) - Curative instruction cured the prejudice
7Drejka v. Hitchens Tire Service, Inc., 2009 WL
1813761 (Del. Super. July 13, 2009)
- Issue
- The Defendant sought to exclude photographs
depicting the damage to Drejkas vehicle and
testimony regarding the forces of impact she
experienced. - The motion was granted in part and denied in
part. - To the extent the motion attempted to limit the
Plaintiffs testimony as to the movements of her
body within the vehicle during the accident, it
was denied. - To the extent the motion sought to exclude
vehicle photographs and testimony relating to
property damage and the Plaintiffs injuries,
however, it was granted. - Citing Davis v. Maute the court held that absent
competent expert testimony, a party in a personal
injury case generally may not directly argue that
the severity of the personal injuries may be
inferred from the extent of automobile damage.
(Id. at 1)
8Kapetanakis v. Baker, 2008 WL 3824165 (Del.
Super. Aug. 11, 2008)
- Court reiterates that Davis prohibits a party in
a personal injury case from arguing directly that
the seriousness of personal injuries from a car
accident correlates to the extent of the damage
to cars, unless the party can produce competent
expert testimony on the issue. (Id. at 2
(quoting Davis, 770 A.2d at 40)). - The Motion in limine was granted to the extent
the Plaintiff was not permitted to admit
photographs of the car or damage estimates. - The Plaintiff was permitted, however, to testify
as to what happened in the passenger compartment
during and immediately after the accident.
9State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Enrique, 3
A.3d 1099 (Del. Sept. 3, 2010) (TABLE)
- Issue
- State Farm appealed the Superior Courts decision
admitting three photographs of the damaged
automobiles into evidence. - First, State Farm argued that the Superior Court
abused its discretion by admitting the
photographs because they were irrelevant to the
determination of damages and unduly prejudicial
to State Farm - Second, State Farm argued that the limiting jury
instruction given by the trial judge was
insufficient to overcome the improper admission
of the photographs.
10State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Enrique, 3
A.3d 1099 (Del. Sept. 3, 2010) (TABLE)
- Superior Court Reasoning
- The Superior Court found the photos admissible
because any evidence which tends to show that it
is more or less probable that her knees collided
with the dashboard is relevant. (Id. at 1
(internal quotation marks omitted) (citation
omitted)). - After the court ruled that the photos were
admissible, the defense proposed, and the court
issued, a curative jury instruction in which the
jury was told that the photographs were not to be
considered as evidence that the damage to the
vehicle correlates with the severity of the
plaintiffs injuries. (Id. at 2)
11State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Enrique, 3
A.3d 1099 (Del. Sept. 3, 2010) (TABLE)
- Continued
- The Supreme Court affirmed -
- Regardless of whether State Farm acknowledge that
Enriques knees were injured when they hit the
dashboard, it was still Enriques burden to
establish a prima facie basis for recovery as to
all elements of her claim and she could present
probative evidence that would assist her in
meeting this burden. - Where photographs are relevant to a disputed
issue and admissible under D.R.E. 403, a curative
jury instruction is necessary to explain that the
jury may not infer the severity of the injury
from photos depicting vehicle damage. - State Farm provided a curative instruction that
the photographs were only to be considered as
evidence that Enriques knees hit the dashboard.
Therefore, the limiting instruction complied with
Davis. (Id. at 3)
12Adams v. Satterfield, 2009 WL 3636762 (Del.
Super. Ct. Aug. 27, 2009)
- Issue
- Did the court improperly deny a motion for
mistrial after defense counsel referred to the
automobile accident as a minor accident. - The court denied the motion and Plaintiffs
counsel rejected a curative instruction. - Plaintiffs motion for new trial on the claim that
the defense counsel ignored the courts trial
admonition and attempted to correlate a minor
accident to minimal injuries during the trial. - The court admonished defense counsel when he
crossed examined Plaintiff Adams in an attempt to
establish the collisions minimal impact.
13Adams v. Satterfield, 2009 WL 3636762 (Del.
Super. Ct. Aug. 27, 2009)
- Reasoning/Rational
- The court denied the motion for new trial and
found that this case was unlike Davis in that - Plaintiffs conceded from the start that
Plaintiffs injuries were not the most serious
injury that ever occurred and was not a million
dollar case. (Id. at 1 (citation omitted)) - Defendant referred to the minor accident only
once (Id. at 1) - Defendant did not attempt to press a correlation
between minor damage and minor personal injuries
with physical evidence after the admonition (Id.
at 1) - The Defendants single reference to a minor
accident was not enough to mislead the jury (Id.
at 1) - Plaintiff declined the curative instruction
14Marafet v. Fiala, 2003 WL 23274847
- An isolated, non-responsive comment about damage
to Plaintiff's car was far less egregious than
what happened in Davis. The comment about the
scratch was a single remark made in court, as
opposed to the introduction of photographs and
argument in opening and closing. Moreover, the
circumstances of the collision were raised more
directly by Marefat than by Davis. - Nevertheless, the comment about the scratch
arguably was a Davis violation. - As mentioned, however, Plaintiff chose not to
object. Had Plaintiff objected, the court could
have given an effective curative instruction on
the spot. - The court also notes that it will be almost
impossible to enforce Davis against lay
witnesses. Whether defendants are careless or
calculating, comments like Defendant's will
happen. - The court does not read Davis to require a
mistrial at the mere mention of damages by a
wayward litigant, especially when it draws no
objection. - Considering the actual Davis violation and taking
its genesis into account, this is a good case to
enforce the contemporaneous objection rule.
15Thomas v. Lagola, 2003 WL 22496355 (Del. Super.)
- Biomechanical testimony criticized
- The Court would also use this opportunity to
reflect that it is concerned about the
appropriate use of biomechanical experts and the
effect they may have on the fair deliberative
process of the jury. This is the first case where
I have had such testimony, and in fairness to the
defense, the Court provided her significant lee
way in the testimony, which she solicited from
her expert. In hindsight, the Court is not
convinced that it was the right path, and when
confronted with similar testimony in the future,
the Court may be more conservative in the
admissibility of such evidence. The biomechanical
game is an unfortunate byproduct of an attempt to
solve the improper use of photographs decided in
Davis v. Maute which has led, I believe, in most
reasonable minds, to an even worse and more
costly process. - I question the value of biomechanical testimony
in the normal motor vehicle case but understand
the dilemma facing counsel if they do not pursue
its admissibility. Defense counsel got a break
from my limited familiarity with such testimony,
but his brethren may not be so fortunate.
16Cuonzo v Shore, 958 A.2d 840 (Del. 2008)
- Emphasizes proper disclosure of evidence in the
pretrial stipulation - Plaintiff argued at trial that the photographs
showed the skid marks at scene and the severity
of the accident, factors probative of Young's
speed and injuries. - The trial judge simply read the plain wording in
the pretrial stipulation literally where
plaintiffs indicated photographs of the
accident scene and Defendant Shore's vehicle. - In concluding that the Estate did not
specifically identify photographs to be used for
the purpose of drawing inferences from damage to
the Youngs' car, the trial judge correctly
determined that it was the Estate's burden to
establish that manifest injustice could only be
avoided by seeking to amend the stipulation to
include photographs that could be used to show
damage to the Youngs' car.
17Sloan v Clemmons, 2001 WL 1735087 (Del. Super.
Ct. Dec. 17, 2001)
- Court laments the aftermath of Davis
- There was a time when photographs of the
vehicles involved in an accident (or, at least,
plaintiffs' vehicle) were front and center in
almost every MIST case tried in this Court. The
defendant would display the photographs of the
vehicles (usually enlarged) depicting minor
damage and would urge the jury to rely upon their
common sense to conclude that the occupants of
the plaintiffs' vehicle could not have sustained
serious injury or, in some instances, any injury
as a result of the accident. - The court would admit the photographs in evidence
based on the notion that they depicted what
happened in the accident as clearly, if not more
clearly, than any witness could. When the court
would admit the photographs in evidence, it would
do so without expert foundation. Again, the
rationale was that jurors were capable of drawing
lay inferences regarding the extent of impact
from photographs depicting vehicle damage. - The Supreme Court's decision in Davis v. Maute
marked a significant change in the evidentiary
practice of this court. Davis expressly rejected
the argument that photographs of the vehicles
support a common sense inference that
plaintiff's subjective complaints are not
credible.
18Sloan v Clemmons, 2001 WL 1735087 (Del. Super.
Ct. Dec. 17, 2001)
- The Other Purpose Exception use of property
damage evidence to attack credibility - Finally, with respect to the argument that
defendant should be permitted to elicit testimony
regarding property damage, force of impact and
speed of the vehicles in order to attack
plaintiff's credibility, the Court is not
satisfied that this case represents the case
envisioned by Davis where evidence otherwise
inadmissible could be admitted for a purpose
other than the proscribed minimal damage/minimal
injury inference. - Certainly, there may be a case where the
plaintiff has so misstated a fact regarding the
accident that evidence otherwise prohibited by
Davis would be admissible to impeach the
plaintiff. Under these circumstances, the
otherwise inadmissible evidence would be
permitted so that a misleading image of the
accident was not permitted to fester with the
jury. - This case, however, presented no such concerns.
The plaintiff did not describe the impact in her
testimony and offered only a sterile description
her body's movements on impact. There simply was
no justification presented at trial to allow an
attack on her credibility with potentially
misleading references to vehicle speed and
property damage.
19Hovis v. Hughes, 2001 WL 1751396 (Del. Super. Ct.
Dec. 28, 2001)
- Court decides motion for new trial
- Defense proffered medical experts who were
prepared to testify that force of impact directly
relates to extent of injury in care crash case - Defendant sought to introduce photographs of the
vehicles through these experts - Court allowed testimony re force of
impact/injury correlation but did not allow
photos - The risk of unguided speculation still
remained, however, with respect to the
correlation between property damage and force of
impact or injury.
20Hovis v. Hughes cont.
- The court acknowledges that its decision to
exclude the photographs was significant. As
stated, the first trial during which the photos
were admitted (without objection) resulted in a
1000 verdict for the plaintiffs. The second
trial before which the photographs were
excluded resulted in a 80,000 verdict for the
plaintiffs. Aside from the photographs, the
evidence presented at both trials was nearly
identical. Thus, it might be said that a
picture is worth about 79,000. The disparity
in the jury verdicts in this case is perhaps the
best evidence of he highly prejudicial nature of
photographic evidence in low impact automobile
accident cases. It is this potential for
prejudice which underscores the need to admit
this evidence only after it has been placed in
proper context by competent expert testimony.