OPINION
The issue before this Court is whether counsel, during closing argument, may properly encourage the jury to draw adverse inferences concerning witnesses not called by the opposing party, where the witnesses were equally available to both parties.
On June 6, 1992, appellant, Brenda Bennett, and appellee, Kimberly Sakel, were involved in a two-vehicle accident near Waynesburg, Pennsylvania. Bennett experienced neck and back pain after the accident and sought treatment from a chiropractor and several physicians.
Bennett and her husband, appellant Robert Bennett, filed a complaint against Sakel in the Court of Common Pleas of Green County. The matter proceeded to a trial before a jury. During closing argument, counsel for Sakel suggested that the jury should draw negative inferences from the Bennetts’ failure to call the police officer who investigated the collision and two physicians who had treated Brenda Bennett. The relevant portion of counsel’s closing argument is as follows:
Now, I wonder, and this is for you to decide. I wonder why Mr. and Mrs. Bennett did not call the trooper in their case....
She [Brenda Bennett] saw Dr. Sterns on one occasion. I wonder why Dr. Sterns wasn’t here to talk to you? I wonder why there wasn’t any follow-up appointment made by Mr. and Mrs. Bennett’s lawyer. After Dr. Sterns, Mrs. Bennett is referred to Dr. Negri, an acupuncturist. And according to the records and cross-examination of Mrs. Bennett, the pain levels decreased in those three visits. Three visits from August 3 to August 11, 1992. I wonder why Dr. Negri wasn’t here to talk to you, especially when his records indicated that there wasn’t to be any return office visit. Those are questions that you, when you go back to the jury deliberation room, will ask yourselves why. Mr. and Mrs. Bennett have promised to you to bring the information here, to bring the evidence here for you to consider. And you wonder, where are they?
N.T. Trial, pp. 370-373.
The Bennetts’ attorney moved for a mistrial or, in the alternative, a curative instruction. The trial court denied the motion for a mistrial and request for a curative instruction.
In
Bentivoglio v. Ralston,
Here, the Superior Court rejected
Bentivoglio
and instead relied on
Augustine by Augustine v. Delgado,
Bentivoglio
is clear that it is the
inference itself
that is prohibited, whether it comes from opposing counsel or the
court in its instructions.
See also Commonwealth v. Newmiller,
Here, Sakel’s counsel made reference during closing argument to the Bennetts’ failure to call the police officer who investigated the accident as well as two physicians who treated Brenda Bennett. However, these three potential witnesses were not peculiarly within the reach of the Bennetts. 3 Thus, the Superior Court erred by not applying Bentivoglio to this matter.
To allow the Superior Court’s holding to stand in this case would have the undesirable effect of creating a paradoxical situation where an attorney would be allowed to suggest that the jury draw adverse inferences during closing arguments about his opponent’s failure to call certain witnesses when, based on the same facts, the trial court would be prohibited by
Bentivoglio
from giving an adverse inference instruction. We therefore hold that an attorney may not ask the jury to
The decision of the Superior Court is reversed and this matter is remanded.
Notes
. The jury did not return an award for Robert Bennett on his loss of consortium claim.
. This Court further found that Bentivoglio was not a case where the uncalled witnesses were peculiarly within the reach of the plaintiff. The defendant had taken pretrial depositions which proved that he had knowledge of the physicians’ treatment of the plaintiff.
. Brenda Bennet gave a deposition in which she described the care given to her by Dr. Sterns and Dr. Negri. Further, Sakel’s counsel called the police officer to testify.
