Allеging diversity, jurisdictional amount, and personal injuries from use of defendant’s detergent, “Cheer”, plaintiff demands a jury trial and $100,000 in damages in his complaint.
It is alleged defendant Proctor & Gamble sold in Wilmington a soap product or detergent—“Cheer”—to customers for washing, clothing to be worn by human beings; plaintiff bоught a box of “Cheer”; later he donned a pair of pajamas which had been laundered in “Cheer”. Plaintiff claims after this he had a heavy rash over his body, “with the exception of his lower legs, and especially over his back, said rash having been caused by сontact with the ‘Cheer’ washed pajamas with plaintiff’s skin, some of the ‘Cheer’ still remaining in the fabric of said pajamas.” “A heavy rash”, “а severely painful aching”, and “an extreme tired, dragged out feeling” were specified in the complaint as the resulting persоnal injuries which incapacitated plaintiff for approximately two weeks. Defendant moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of jurisdictional amount, or in the alternative for an order on plaintiff to produce evidence of damages exсeeding $3,000 at a special pretrial hearing. Defendant asserts, so far as it can learn, plaintiff’s medical expenses did nоt exceed $40, no permanent injuries were alleged or suffered, medical treatment was received on only two days without hospitalization or special nursing attention, and only two weeks absence from employment were alleged—facts of a nature, defendant contends, which would warrant this court in sustaining only a maximum possible verdict far below the requisite jurisdictional amount.
1. Twо threshold facts are important: a) the action is one in tort, principally for pain and suffering; b) minimum jurisdictional amount is in issue, not the magnified optimistic six digit sum of plaintiff’s prayer for damages. The legal difficulty here, as in all such cases, is there is no exact yardstick tо measure recovery for pain and suffering, even when all the facts and circumstances are known. It is less certain of computation, in this case, for example, when none of the detail of plaintiff's suffering is now before the court. In any
The cases which have considered dismissal for want of jurisdictional amount are largely in agreement on the applicable principles.
In Odlivak v. Elliott, D.C.Del.,
FR 12(d) specifies alternative mechanics for resolving the motion by providing such a defense as this “shall be heard and determinеd before trial on application of any party, unless the court orders that the hearing and determination thereof be deferred until the trial”. A practical approach to the problem is thus indicated. If a preliminary hearing be ordered, plаintiff would be put to almost his entire proof of damages, probably by expert medical testimony. Defendant would undoubtedly seek leave to rebut the proffered evidence by other experts. All this would be in vacuo, without a frame of reference, cоncerning the obtuse issue of whether the pain and suffering could conceivably have a money value to plaintiff exceеding $3,000. If plaintiff prevailed at the preliminary hearing—doubts being there resolved in his favor and their final resolution postponed until trial—thе whole performance of proof would later have to be repeated by a second run before the jury. Under the сircumstances, a preliminary hearing seems a fruitless and expensive step, avoidable without prejudice to the merits of defendant’s motion.
In Scott v. Pennsylvania R. Co., E.D.Pa.,
Ordered: Defendant’s motion is denied at this time, with leave to renew the motion to dismiss the complaint after all of plaintiff’s evidence of damages has been introduced at the trial of the casе. As the procedure of proof is a matter within the discretion of the trial judge, plaintiff might commence to .adduce his proof of damages first before evidence of negligent violation of duty is brought forward. After the proof of damages is in, defendant may then, in the absence of facts to sustain plaintiff’s position, move for dismissal of the cause for lack of jurisdictional amount.
Notes
. E. g., references in Federal Digest, Federal civil procedure <§=1742.
