OPINION OF THE COURT
(March 14, 2016)
Appellant Antilles School, Inc., appeals from a jury verdict in favor of the appellee, Jamie Lembach, as well as the Superior Court’s denial of its motion to set aside the verdict. For the reasons that follow, we affirm, albeit on different grounds than those articulated by the Superior Court.
I. BACKGROUND
On October 25, 2012, Lembach sued Antilles School in the Superior Court, asserting causes of action for negligence and premises liability. In his complaint, Lembach alleged that he attended a “Food Fair” at Antilles School on the night of January 28, 2012, and after exiting a taxi walked towards a dual-use pedestrian and vehicular bridge that went over a nine-foot deep natural gulley containing metal culverts. Lembach, who suffers from cataracts and was legally blind, tripped and fell, falling off the bridge and sustaining injuries that required his medical evacuation from St. Thomas to a hospital in West Palm Beach, Florida.
Prior to trial, Antilles School filed a motion to preclude Lembach’s expert witness, Rosie Mackay, from testifying. In her expert report,
A jury trial began on September 29, 2014, in which the jury heard from several witnesses, including Mackay. On September 30, 2014, the Superior Court furnished its draft jury instructions to the parties, which provided separate instructions for Lembach’s negligence and premises liability claims. On October 1, 2014, Antilles School submitted a written objection to the Superior Court’s draft instructions, asserting that the separate instructions were unnecessary because “[premises liability is a theory of negligence, where the basis of the duty of care is the possession or control of the premises where [an] injury occurred,” and “[t]he elements are the same — a plaintiff must prove: (1) duty, (2) breach, (3) causation, and (4) damages.” (J.A. 277-78.) Nevertheless, at a jury instructions conference later that day, Antilles School proposed that the Superior Court’s verdict form be revised to include only a single claim rather than two, because “whether they find [Antilles School] negligent under Count One or Count Two, you only need to ask them if they’re negligent once.” (J.A. 1289.) The Superior Court agreed, and revised the verdict form to remove all references to premises liability and couch the pertinent questions only in negligence terms. However, notwithstanding the revision to the verdict form, the Superior Court still separately instructed the jury on both negligence and premises liability.
After trial, Antilles School moved for judgment as a matter of law or, in the alternative, a new trial. It also moved for remittitur, alleging that the amount of damages — even with the 20 percent comparative fault reduction — for pain and suffering were excessive. The Superior Court denied Antilles School’s motions on April 8, 2015, and issued its judgment. Antilles School filed a timely notice of appeal with this Court on May 7, 2015, as well as a motion to amend the judgment with the Superior Court, which alleged that the April 8, 2015 judgment contained a clerical error relating to the date post-judgment interest would begin to accrue. The Superior Court granted the motion and issued an amended judgment on May 12, 2015, and Antilles School filed an amended notice of appeal with this Court on May 22, 2015.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
“The Supreme Court [has] jurisdiction over all appeals arising from final judgments, final decrees or final orders of the Superior Court.” V.I. Code Ann. tit. 4, § 32(a); see also 48 U.S.C. § 1613a(d) (“Upon the establishment of the appellate court provided for in section 1611(a) of this title all appeals from the decisions of the courts of the Virgin Islands established by local law not previously taken must be taken to that appellate court.”). The Superior Court’s amended May 12,2015 judgment is a final order adjudicating all of the issues between the parties, and therefore, this Court has jurisdiction over this appeal. Allen v. HOVENSA, L.L.C.,
The standard of review for our examination of the Superior Court’s application of law is plenary, while the trial court’s findings of fact are
B. Judgment as a Matter of Law
Antilles School, as its first issue on appeal, contends that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law because Lembach failed to introduce sufficient evidence at trial to satisfy the elements of negligence. A party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law when, in considering all of the evidence, accepting the nonmoving party’s evidence as true, and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party, the court concludes that a reasonable jury could only enter judgment in favor of the moving party. Kendall v. Daily News Publ’g Co.,
As this Court has previously held, “the foundational elements of negligence” are: “(1) a legal duty of care to the plaintiff, (2) a breach of that duty of care by the defendant (3) constituting the factual and legal cause of (4) damages to the plaintiff.” Machado v. Yacht Haven U.S.V.I., LLC,
We disagree. During trial, Mackay testified, based on her training, experience and knowledge of the relevant safety standards, that the bridge needed a protective barrier that was at least 42 inches high because it was being used as a pedestrian walkway and the drop-off from the bridge was over 48 inches. Although Antilles School challenges the admissibility of Mackay’s testimony, “when an appellate court reviews the sufficiency of the evidence, it must consider all of the evidence the [jury] had before it, including any evidence that is later determined to be inadmissible.”
As to causation, Antilles School maintains that the evidence introduced at trial established that Lembach’s “own conduct was the
C. Duplicative Jury Instructions
Antilles School also argues that the Superior Court erred by separately instructing the jury on negligence and premises liability. As it did in its written objection to the Superior Court’s draft jury instructions, Antilles School asserts on appeal that the two causes of action were duplicative, since they involved the same parties, the same conduct, and there same injury.
Nevertheless, “[n]o error or defect in any ruling or order or in anything done or omitted by the Superior Court... is ground for granting relief or reversal on appeal where its probable impact, in light of all of the evidence in the case, is sufficiently minor so as not to affect the substantial rights of the parties.” V.I.S.Ct.R. 4(i). As Antilles School itself recognized in its objection before the Superior Court:
The elements are the same____The facts alleged as to those elements are essentially identical between the two counts. The alleged harm is*414 the same. The elements required to succeed are the same. As such, the premises liability claim is duplicative of the negligence claim.
(J.A. 277-78.) Instructing the jury twice on the same issue, “whether identical in language or merely in similar form,” while “erroneous,” is nevertheless harmless error that does not require reversal. Holmes v. J. C. Penney Co.,
In a departure from its position at trial, Antilles School argues in its appellate brief that the duplicative instructions may have confused the jury. Specifically, Antilles School now maintains that general references to the elements of ordinary negligence could have led the jury to render a verdict in favor of Lembach on a ground other than the premises-liability theory pursued at trial. For example, Antilles School speculates that the jury, “[i]n light of the evidence about [Lembach]’s severe vision and cognitive problems,” may have impermissibly concluded “that Antilles School had a duty to act with reasonable care to ‘protect’ [Lembach]” based on “some additional responsibility [owed] to [Lembach] beyond that of a premises owner.” (Appellant’s Br. 39.)
We question whether the jury could have, in light of all of the evidence in the record, concluded that Antilles School was not liable on a premises-liability theory of negligence, but liable under a different theory of negligence that was neither argued by Lembach nor supported by the evidence introduced at trial. Nevertheless, it would have been easy to determine the basis for the jury’s verdict if the verdict form permitted the jury to state whether it was finding Antilles School liable for premises liability or ordinary negligence. The record, however, reflects that the Superior Court proposed a verdict form that would have required the jury to make separate findings on premises liability and ordinary negligence, only for Antilles School to request that the verdict form be changed to only provide for a single question on Antilles School’s liability. Consequently, Antilles School’s own request that the Superior Court change its proposed verdict form has made it effectively impossible for this Court to address its claim that it was prejudiced by the Superior Court’s duplicative jury instruction, thus providing us with little choice but to affirm. Accord Williams v. People,
Antilles School contends that the Superior Court abused its discretion when it permitted Mackay to testify as an expert witness at trial. In doing so, Antilles School renews the argument made in its pre-trial motion that Mackay should not have qualified as an expert because she failed to articulate the methodology used to arrive at her opinion.
1. Standard for Expert Testimony in Virgin Islands Courts
Before reaching the merits of Antilles School’s claim, we must ascertain the legal standard that governs admission of expert testimony in proceedings in the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands. On April 7, 2010, the Governor signed Act No. 7161 into law, of which section 15 reads, in pertinent part, that “Title 5, Virgin Islands Code, chapter 67, Admissibility of Evidence, Uniform Rules of Evidence, is hereby repealed and replaced with the Federal Rules of Evidence, Pub. L. [No.] 93-595, § 1, January 2, 1975, 88 Stat. 1926, and all subsequent amendments thereto.” Act No. §7161, § 15(b) (V.I. Reg. Sess. 2010). Both this Court and the Superior Court have questioned whether the legislature may delegate its lawmaking authority to Congress and the United States Supreme Court in such a way. See Vanterpool v. Gov’t of the V.I.,
A witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education may testify in the form of an opinion or otherwise if:
(a) the expert’s scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue;
(b) the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data;
(c) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods; and
*416 (d) the expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to the facts of the case.
Alexander v. People,
In its September 12, 2014 opinion, the Superior Court acknowledged that the standard set forth in Federal Rule of Evidence 702 governed Antilles School’s motion to preclude Mackay from testifying as an expert. The Superior Court recognized that the United States Supreme Court, in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
[a] trial judge must determine at the outset. . . whether the expert is proposing to testify to (1) scientific knowledge that (2) will assist the trier of fact to understand or determine a fact in issue. This entails a preliminary assessment of whether the reasoning or methodology underlying the testimony is scientifically valid and of whether that reasoning or methodology properly can be applied to the facts in issue.
Daubert,
The Superior Court, however, declined to apply the Daubert factors to this case. In doing so, the Superior Court found “that several of the Daubert factors are inapplicable to Mackay’s proposed testimony,” and that “the Daubert factors . . . have not been explicitly applied to evaluate the methodology of a safety engineer.” (J.A. 32-33.) In doing so, it relied
In its appellate brief, Antilles School states that “the trial court declined to apply the Daubert factors,” “[i]nstead . . . cited the Frye ‘general acceptance’ test, and one 19-year old case from New York, Liriano,” and asserts “[t]hat ruling was an error of law.” (Appellant’s Br. 25.) To support its claim that the Superior Court erred when it failed to apply Daubert, Antilles School cites to absolutely no authority, apparently believing that it is self-evident that the Superior Court is bound to follow every pronouncement from the United States Supreme Court, regardless of the context. Surprisingly, Lembach also does not address the issue of the applicable legal standard, apparently because he believes that this Court already adopted the Daubert standard in People v. Todmann,
Lembach is correct that this Court cited to Daubert in its Todmann and Suarez decisions. However, neither of these cases interpreted Federal Rule of Evidence 702. Rather, both decisions were controlled by the former 5 V.I.C. § 911, a local statute governing admission of expert testimony that was subsequently repealed by Act No. 7191, because the pertinent evidentiary decisions had been made by the Superior Court prior to repeal of section 911. Suarez,
We also conclude that the Superior Court correctly recognized that it is not bound to mechanically follow every precedent from the United States Supreme Court. Clearly, state and territorial courts must follow, as binding precedent, decisions of the United States Supreme Court that interpret the United States Constitution, federal statutes, and federal treaties. See Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. v. Martin,
We recognize that, in prior cases, this Court has held that “where a Virgin Islands statute is patterned after a statute from another jurisdiction, the borrowed statute shall be construed to mean what the highest court from the borrowed statute’s jurisdiction, prior to the Virgin Islands enactment, construed the statute to mean.” Boynes v. Trans. Servs. of St. John,
Unlike borrowed statutes — which presume that the legislature of the borrowing jurisdiction is aware of and intends to adopt the interpretations of the borrowed statute by the highest court of the jurisdiction from which it is taken — borrowed rules are generally not construed the same. In other words, courts do not state that borrowed rules incorporate the construction given them by the highest court of [the] jurisdiction from which they were borrowed. Instead, courts typically*420 view such earlier constructions of borrowed rules as [being] persuasive, not mandatory.
Ventura,
Nevertheless, while the Superior Court was not required to follow Daubert, we conclude that the Daubert standard represents the soundest rule for the Virgin Islands. In the 22 years since the United States Supreme Court issued Daubert, the overwhelming majority of state courts voluntarily abolished the Frye standard in favor of Daubert,
2. Mackay’s Expert Testimony
Having determined that Daubert should have guided the Superior Court’s inquiry, we now turn to the admissibility of the expert testimony in this case under that reliability standard. The gravamen of Antilles School’s claim is that the Superior Court erred in allowing Mackay to provide any testimony because she failed to articulate a methodology for arriving at her conclusion that a bridge with a drop-off of more than 48 inches requires a protective barrier of at least 42 inches in height.
In its September 12, 2014 opinion, the Superior Court determined that the various safety codes cited by Mackay “do not define the standard of care owed in the Virgin Islands” and any reference to them was “substantially outweighed by the danger of a confusion of the issues or misleading the jury.” (J.A. 28.) The Superior Court determined that Mackay was permitted to “base some of her opinions concerning the safety of the bridge based on her knowledge of the various safety codes as well as her training and experience under Rule[s] 703 and 704, [but] any testimony by Mackay in reference to these safety codes [was] inadmissible unless raised on cross-examination by the defense.” (J.A. 28-29.)
The Superior Court’s reliance on Saldana is significantly misplaced. As noted earlier, “the foundational elements of negligence” are “(1) a legal duty of care to the plaintiff, (2) a breach of that duty of care by the defendant (3) constituting the factual and legal cause of (4) damages to the plaintiff.” Machado,
In Saldana, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit clearly construed the plaintiff’s complaint as asserting a cause of action for negligence per se, rather than ordinary negligence, premised on the defendant’s violation of certain Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulations that the court concluded were not legally-binding as to that nonemployee plaintiff. Saldana,
We turn now to plaintiff’s attack on the court’s In limine ruling precluding plaintiff from offering evidence through an expert witness as to the OSHA standard of care allegedly relevant to the logging operation here involved. Although no opinion was filed, we think the district court’s ruling was based on its view that OSHAis limited to employees of an employer and since plaintiff was not an employee of Kane, the OSHA regulation was inapplicable to him. We so infer from the court’s colloquy with counsel.
The issue to be decided here is whether the OSHA regulation is admissible in a diversity action as evidence of the standard of care owed by the defendants to the plaintiff, not whether the OSHA itself controls that issue. Since the question involves the admission of evidence in a federal court, the Federal Rules of Evidence control. We do not understand the parties to contend otherwise. Thus, our review of the trial court’s order excluding the evidence is for abuse of discretion. Savarese v. Agriss,883 F.2d 1194 , 1200 (3d Cir. 1989).
We can think of no reason under the Federal Rules of Evidence why the OSHA regulation is not relevant evidence of the standard of care once it is determined, as we have done, that... the defendants could owe plaintiff a duty of care. It is important to reiterate that to use the OSHA regulation as evidence here is not to apply the OSHA itself to this case. Rather, it is to “borrow” the OSHA regulation for use as evidence of the standard of care owed to plaintiff.
Rolick v. Collins Pine Co.,
Here, the record clearly reflects that Lembach did not sue Antilles School for negligence per se, but under a premises-liability theory of
The fact that Mackay did not cite to specific portions of these codes and standards in her expert report does not provide an alternate basis for the Superior Court’s decision to exclude this portion of her testimony. Numerous courts have held that an expert witness’s methodology is not unreliable simply because the witness uses
Under these circumstances, Mackay’s expert testimony cannot provide a basis for reversal. Although Antilles School argues that it lacked the opportunity to cross-examine Mackay at trial as to the specific various codes, this was a problem of Antilles School’s own making; had Antilles
E. Remittitur
Finally, Antilles School contends that the Superior Court erred when it denied its request for remittitur. Remittitur is a common-law doctrine in which a court will reduce the damages award indicated in a jury verdict after concluding that “no rational jury, acting on the basis of the full evidentiary record, and without being inflamed by passion or prejudice or other improper consideration, could have awarded such a large sum as damages.” Thomas Hyll Funeral Home, Inc. v. Bradford,
Remittitur is a procedural device, and thus the authority to recognize it is vested with a jurisdiction’s court of last resort. See, e.g., Payne v. Jones,
Contrary to this Court’s precedents, the Superior Court failed to conduct a Banks analysis to determine either (1) whether remittitur is cognizable in the Virgin Islands, or (2) if it is, what legal standard governs a remittitur motion. Surprisingly, Antilles School offers what could charitably be described as a cursory Banks analysis, with virtually no analysis of the third — and most important — factor.
As to the first Banks factor, the United States District Court of the Virgin Islands has frequently made use of remittitur. See, e.g., Feuerstein v. Simpson, No. 04-134,
To support its invocation of the remittitur power, the United States District Court of the Virgin Islands has cited to decisions issued by the Third Circuit that establish remittitur as a discretionary power of a trial judge. See, e.g., Spence v. Bd. of Educ.,
With respect to local courts, in the earliest case mentioning remittitur, the Superior Court
Today, most states recognize remittitur. David Fink, Best v. Taylor Machine Works, the Remittitur Doctrine, and the Implications for Tort Reform, 94 Nw. U. L. Rev. 227, 235 & n.60 (1999) (collecting cases). Two state supreme courts, however, have abolished remittitur, albeit for slightly different reasons. The Oregon Supreme Court, interpreting a provision of the Oregon Constitution that is similar to the Seventh Amendment of the United States Constitution,
Like the Oregon Supreme Court, the Missouri Supreme Court has also concluded that the remittitur procedure “constitutes an invasion of the jury’s function by the trial judge,” since it interferes with “a party’s right to trial by jury” and constitutes “an assumption of a power to weigh the evidence, a function reserved to the trier(s) of fact.” Firestone v. Crown Ctr. Redev. Corp.,
Scholars have also heavily criticized remittitur. Several scholars believe “that remittitur interferes with the Seventh Amendment guarantee against reexamination of facts determined by juries.” Sarah M. R. Cravens, The Brief Demise of Remittitur: The Role of Judges in Shaping Remedies Law, 42 LOY. L.A. L. Rev. 247, 251-52 (2008). Significantly, the United States Supreme Court has never held that remittitur is constitutional under the Seventh Amendment. Rather, in a case in which it concluded that the related concept of additur — increasing the amount of damages awarded by a jury — violated the Seventh Amendment, the United States Supreme Court stated, in dicta, that it would not interfere with remittitur due to its long-standing usage in the federal system, but that “it. . . may be that if the question of remittitur were now before us for the first time, it would be decided otherwise.” Dimick v. Schiedt,
We conclude that remittitur does not represent the soundest rule for the Virgin Islands. As noted earlier, remittitur, while heavily used in the federal system, has only sporadically been invoked in Superior Court proceedings, and even then has been largely disfavored. Since remittitur has not received widespread acceptance in the Virgin Islands, the burden associated with its abolition would be very minimal. Banks,
We recognize that the majority of United States jurisdictions have adopted remittitur. But as explained above, many of those jurisdictions have tempered remittitur with additur, so that plaintiffs and defendants may both challenge damage awards that they believe are irrational — whether irrationally high, or irrationally low. Although the Seventh Amendment has not been extended to the several States by incorporation through the Fourteenth Amendment, Congress, through the Revised Organic Act, expressly extended the Seventh Amendment to the Virgin Islands. See 48 U.S.C. § 1561 (“The following provisions of and amendments to the Constitution of the United States are hereby extended to the Virgin Islands . . . and shall have the same force and effect there as in the United States or in any State of the United States ... the first to ninth amendments inclusive . . . .”); Newfound Mgmt. Corp. v. Lewis,
Some scholars contend that remittitur is “not a plenary power to reduce damages, analogous to the sentencing power in criminal cases, but rather an indirect power to threaten a new trial unless the plaintiff accept[s] the reduced judgment.” George Fisher, Plea Bargaining’s Triumph, 109 Yale L.J. 857, 1000 (2000). Because a trial court possesses the authority to grant a new trial based on the weight of the evidence, it has been posited that “remittitur . . . [is] promotive of both the administration of justice and putting an end to litigation.” Francis C. Amendola, 65A C.J.S. New Trial § 299. In other words, some view remittitur as primarily a court-facilitated settlement procedure in which the court attempts to “allow[ ] both parties to walk away satisfied” by consenting to a reduced verdict in lieu of “a retrial [that] would consume substantial judicial resources.” Sean J. Sullivan, Civil Procedure and Constitutional Law:
As a threshold matter, judicial economy, while important, “is not or at least should not be the overriding goal of our system in resolving disputes.” Allsup’s Convenience Stores, Inc. v. North River Ins. Co.,
[I]n civil matters like this one, courts exist to resolve disputes between litigants. When a plaintiff claims that he has been injured because of the fault of the defendant, the court proceeding is designed to give the plaintiff a fair opportunity to prove his contentions and to obtain adequate compensation, if he is correct. Conversely, a defendant is afforded a fair chance to meet a plaintiff’s contentions head-on. The interest of courts in efficient administration, though important, is not superior to the interests of the plaintiff or the defendant.
Id. at 7-8 (emphasis in original) (quoting Donovan v. Penn Shipping Co., Inc.,
In any case, we disagree that remittitur is necessary to facilitate post-verdict settlements. As noted above, the Superior Court possesses the authority to grant a new trial based on the weight of the evidence. To the extent the costs of a new trial are prohibitive, nothing prevents the parties from simply negotiating their own settlement to avoid the new trial. Moreover, “[ajppeal, or the threat of appeal, often leads to further [post-verdict] negotiations.” Michael J. Saks, Do We Really Know Anything About the Behavior of the Tort Litigation System — And Why Not?, 140 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1147, 1280 (1992). In fact, “[o]ne major study found awards were reduced in 15% of cases and increased in 2-3%” as a result of “agreements between the parties” after a jury verdict. Id. (citing Michael G. Shanley & Mark A. Peterson, Posttrial Adjustments to Jury Awards 27 (1987)).
Additionally, the purported benefits of the remittitur procedure do not change the fact that remittitur removes power from a jury and vests it with a judge. As one leading scholar explained in summarizing the sentiments that led to the proposal, and eventual ratification of, the Seventh Amendment:
*437 It is unquestionable, but nonetheless sometimes overlooked, that the general intention of the antifederalist agitation for mandatory jury trial was to achieve results from jury-tried cases that would not be forthcoming from trials conducted by judges alone. Clearly the antifederalists were not arguing for the institution of civil jury trial in the belief that jury trials were short, inexpensive, decorous and productive of the same decisions that judges sitting without juries would produce. The inconveniences of jury trial were accepted precisely because in important instances, through its ability to disregard substantive rules of law, the jury would reach a result that the judge either could not or would not reach. Those who favored the civil jury were not misguided tinkerers with procedural devices; they were, for the day, libertarians who avowed that important areas of protection for litigants in general, and for debtors in particular, would be placed in grave danger unless it were required that juries sit in civil cases.
Charles W. Wolfram, The Constitutional History of the Seventh Amendment, 57 Minn. L. Rev. 639, 671 (1973). Congress, by extending the Seventh Amendment to the Virgin Islands expressed a strong policy preference for civil cases to be adjudicated by a jury rather than a judge. But remittitur effectively permits a judge to substitute his view of the evidence for that of the jury. Firestone,
Consequently, we conclude that the best rule is to decline to recognize remittitur, and to permit a jury’s verdict to be altered by a judge
III. CONCLUSION
Because Lembach introduced sufficient evidence of a breach of duty and causation, the evidence was sufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict. Although the Superior Court erred by separately instructing the jury on negligence and premises liability, the error is both harmless and invited, given Antilles School’s representation to the Superior Court that the elements of negligence and premises liability are the same and its request that the Superior Court utilize a verdict form with only a single liability question. And while the Superior Court committed several errors with regard to Mackay’s expert testimony, these errors benefited Antilles School, and thus cannot form the basis for a new trial.
Notes
In its April 8,2015 opinion, the Superior Court correctly cited the elements of negligence that this Court adopted in Machado, but then held that it would “rel[y] on additional sections of Division 2, Negligence, of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, to define, clarify or expand upon these elements” without conducting the analysis required by Banks v. Int’l Rental & Leasing Corp.,
We recognize that the United States Supreme Court has held that federal appellate courts should exclude erroneously admitted expert testimony from consideration, and if the remaining admissible evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, a judgment as a matter of law is appropriate. Weisgram v. Marley Co.,
Antilles School also argues that it “had no reason to foresee that the walkway presented an unreasonable risk of harm” because “the campus was inspected ‘inside and out’..., the bridge was used as a walkway by hundreds of students every day, and for hundreds of campus events for the general public, and there had never been a fall over the wall on the walkway bridge in the eleven years it existed, day or night.” (Appellant’s Br. 11.) This argument lacks merit, since it ignores that evidence was introduced at trial that Lembach possessed greatly limited vision due to his cataracts, and thus could not perceive the danger in the same manner as an able-bodied person. Moreover, if all of the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to Lembach — as we must when considering Antilles School’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence — the fact that Antilles School campus had been “inspected ‘inside and out’ ” for years prior to Lembach’s fall could support a finding that Antilles School possessed constructive notice of a dangerous condition, yet did nothing to remedy it. Perez v. Ritz-Carlton (V.I.) Inc.,
In its brief, Antilles School further states that the Superior Court erred by failing to grant its motion for a new trial on the grounds that “the verdict was against the clear weight of the evidence... presented at trial as a whole.” (Appellant’s Br. 16.) However, in a civil case, “the weight of the evidence is an argument to the factfinder, not a ground for reversal on appeal,” and “[t]hus the [trial] court’s denial of a new-trial motion that was based on the weight of the evidence is generally unreviewable” except “to the extent that the contention is that the [trial] court applied the wrong legal standard.” Elyse v. Bridgeside Inc.,
In its April 8,2015 opinion denying Antilles School’s motion for a new trial, the Superior Court held that negligence and premises liability are separate causes of action because “[o]ur Supreme Court has pointed to two separate sections of the Restatement as reflective of Virgin Islands common law: Restatement (Second) of Torts § 281 and Restatement (Second) OfTorts § 343.” (J.A. 102.) To support this claim, the Superior Court cited to two prior footnotes in its opinion in which it concluded that this Court’s decision in White v. Spenceley Realty, LLC,
In doing so, the Superior Court misinterpreted our precedents. We have acknowledged that decisions of this Court issued prior to this Court’s acknowledgement of the implicit repeal of former 1 V.I.C. § 4 — which had mandated reliance on the Restatements — should not be “blindly follow[ed]” if they “were predicated solely on 1 V.I.C. § 4.” Connor,
Although the Daubert ruling appeared limited only to scientists providing expert testimony, the United States Supreme Court subsequently held in Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137, 147-51,
See, e.g., Hodge v. Bluebeard's Castle,
Today, it appears that only California, Illinois, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington continue to follow the Frye standard. See People v. Lucas,
Antilles School also argues that the Superior Court erred when it construed its post-trial motion for a new trial as an untimely motion for reconsideration. Pursuant to Superior Court Rule 36(b), post-trial motions may be filed up to “thirty (30) days from final judgment, except with respect to [a motion under] Rule 50.” Moreover, “the common law confers trial courts with the discretion to revise any interlocutory order at any time prior to entry of a final judgment.” island Tile & Marble, LLC v. Bertrand,
In addition to the methodology argument, Antilles School alleges that Mackay’s testimony about the need for a 42-inch barrier also could not have assisted the trier of fact because “Mackay offered no opinion that a 42 [inch] barrier would have prevented [Lembach]’s fall.” (Appellant’s Br. 26.) However, Mackay testified that
If there’s a drop of more than 48 inches, somebody could fall over and get hurt, and that should really be guarded, mitigated by a device that’s at least 42 inches high. It can be guarded in a variety of ways to prevent somebody from falling more than 48 inches and getting hurt.
(J.A. 672 (emphasis added).) While Mackay did not mention Lembach by name, it is implicit from this statement that she believed that a 42-inch barrier would have prevented him from falling off of the bridge.
We note that in this case, although Antilles School filed a motion to exclude Mackay’s expert testimony, it “never made a request for a Daubert hearing to challenge [her] methodology,” which this Court has previously indicated may result in the Daubert issue being “deemed waived for purposes of appeal.” VI. Waste Mgmt. Auth.,
We recognize that Lembach did not take a cross-appeal from the Superior Court’s September 12, 2014 opinion. However, as the United States Supreme Court has recently recognized, an appellee may defend a judgment on any alternative ground without taking a cross-appeal. Jennings v. Stephens,_ U.S. _,
In its February 26, 2015 opinion addressing the jury’s inconsistent contributory negligence findings, the Superior Court stated that “only the Superior Court is required to conduct [a] Banks analys[i]s,” and that the parties only possess an obligation to “cit[e] to binding authority when faced with questions of law that lack precedent.” (J.A. 55-56.) However, there is absolutely no basis in any of this Court’s precedents for the proposition that attorneys are not required to fully brief all questions of law relevant to the issues that are being litigated, including all three Banks factors. On the contrary, this Court has previously required parties to file supplemental briefs specifically analyzing the Banks factors. See, e.g., Matthew v. Herman,
It is not clear from Feuerstein and other United States District Court decisions why the District Court chose to extend a test adopted by Pennsylvania’s intermediate appellate court to the Virgin Islands. We further note that the sixth factor in this test, “the amount of compensation demanded in the original complaint,” appears to be incompatible with Virgin Islands statutory law. See 5 V.I.C. § 5 (“Notwithstanding any provision of law, in any cause of action based on tort, contract law, or otherwise to recover damages for injury or death to the person or for harm to the plaintiff resulting from the defendant’s wrongful conduct, no complaint or cross-complaint shall specify the amount of damages but shall contain a prayer for general relief and shall state that the damages are within the jurisdictional limits of the court to which the pleading is addressed. Nothing in this section shall be construed as preventing a party from asking for a specific amount of damages at the trial.” (emphasis added)).
Prior to 2004, the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands had been known as the Territorial Court of the Virgin Islands. In 2004, the Legislature redesignated the Territorial Court as the Superior Court. 2004 V.I. Sess. Laws 179 (Act No. 6687, § 1(b)). To avoid confusion, we refer to the former Territorial Court by its current name.
Compare, U.S. CONST, amend. VII (“In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.”), with, Or. Const, art. VII, § 3 (“In actions at law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise re-examined in any court of this state, unless the court can affirmatively say there is no evidence to support the verdict.”).
Subsequently, the Oregon Supreme Court established a partial exception to its Van Lom precedent in order to comply with a decision from the United States Supreme Court mandating that judicial review of punitive damage awards be available to determine whether they comport with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Oberg v. Honda Motor Co.,
Two years after the Missouri Supreme Court issued its opinion in Firestone, the Missouri Legislature enacted a statute that revived the doctrines of remittitur and additur. Badahman v. Catering St. Louis,
But see Gasperini v. Center for Humanities, Inc.,
Accord, Supinger v. Stakes,
The Seventh Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that “[i]n Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.” The United States Supreme Court has interpreted this reference to “the rules of the common law” to be the common law as it existed in England at the time the Seventh Amendment was ratified in 1791. Dimick, 293 U.S. at 476. However, while the Seventh Amendment became operative in the federal courts in 1791 by virtue of its original ratification, it was only extended to the Virgin Islands through the 1968 amendments to the Revised Organic Act of 1954. Moreover, prior to its purchase by the United States in 1917, the Virgin Islands had been a colony of Denmark. Because we decline to adopt remittitur, and for largely the same reasons would not adopt additur, we do not address here whether Congress, by incorporating the Seventh Amendment by reference through the 1968 amendments to the Revised Organic Act, intended for this reference to “the common law” to refer to the common law as it existed in 1791, or as it existed in 1968, or to encompass only the common law of England. See Browning v. Browning, 9 P. 677, 679-85 (N.M. 1886) (concluding that reference to the “common law” in New Mexico’s organic act did not incorporate the common law of England, but the common law that existed prior to New Mexico’s admission as a territory, including the civil law of Mexico); see also Hornbuckle v. Toombs,
For example, to justify its claim that the jury’s award was excessive, Antilles School contends that this Court should consider that Lembach “quickly received emergency care,” (Appellant’s Br. 46), effectively requesting that we give greater weight to that fact other than testimony establishing that Lembach had suffered traumatic injury to the spine, was going in and out of consciousness, and was in a tremendous amount of pain while awaiting medical attention.
It is well established that, under the “right result, wrong reason” doctrine, where the record otherwise supports the trial court’s judgment, an appellate court may affirm that judgment for reasons other than those relied upon by the trial court, even if the trial court’s reasons are erroneous. Hamdallah v. Warlick,
