James B. COWART, Appellant,
v.
KENDALL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH and Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company, Appellees.
KENDALL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH and Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company, Appellants,
v.
Todd COWART and James B. Cowart, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
Podhurst, Orseck, Parks, Josefsberg, Eaton, Meadow & Olin and Joel Eaton, Miami, for appellant.
*290 Vernis & Bowling and Richard H.W. Maloy, Miami, for appellees.
Before SCHWARTZ, C.J., and NESBITT and DANIEL S. PEARSON, JJ.
SCHWARTZ, Chief Judge.
Mrs. Todd Cowart was severely injured in a bicycle-automobile collision. She and her husband, James, who asserted a purely derivative claim, brought an action for damages which resulted in jury verdicts of $400,000 for Mrs. Cowart and zero for Mr. Cowart. Mr. Cowart then moved for a new trial as to his damages on the ground that the verdict in his case was inadequate and contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. Although it was and is undisputed that he sustained at least some loss of consortium,[1] so that the award of no damages for that element was plainly unsupportable, the trial judge denied the motion on the sole ground that Cowart had not objected nor requested resubmission of the case to the jury after the verdicts were returned. In considering his appeal we disagree with that view but, for the reasons stated below, nevertheless affirm the judgment under review.
In order to dispel any existing confusion on the matter, which we think is mostly unjustified in any event, we specifically hold that a contemporaneous objection to a zero verdict in a derivative personal injury claim, even though accompanied by a money award in the nonderivative one, is not required to preserve the claim that the award of no damages is inadequate or contrary to the weight of the evidence. The decision of this court in Savoca v. Sherry Frontenac Hotel Operating Co.,
But these decisions do not apply here. Mr. Cowart pointedly does not complain that his verdict is "inconsistent" with his wife's; indeed, he correctly points out that there is nothing necessarily or legally "inconsistent" between an award to the injured person and a finding of no damages in the derivative claim, which may be perfectly appropriate if the evidence on the point is insufficient or conflicting. E.g., Tejon v. Broome,
*292 Despite having said all this, we do not reverse. This apparent paradox stems from our finding that in the light of the ample, although not independently excessive, verdict in Mrs. Cowart's case and the emphasis upon her recovery in the argument of the Cowarts' counsel there is a real possibility that the jury, albeit incorrectly, included Mr. Cowart's claim for loss of consortium in his wife's award;[5] on this basis, we have determined that the interests of justice and the prevention of a possible double recovery require that any new trial be held as to both of their damage claims, rather than Mr. Cowart's alone. Vega, supra; Shank, supra; Noll v. Byorick,
Since there is no merit whatever in the defendants' challenges, raised in separate appeals, to Mrs. Cowart's award, the judgment below, in its entirety, is
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] In this court, Mr. Cowart has conceded that, as a result of the plaintiffs' counsel's request for the jury to do so in final argument, it likely included the medical expenses, which the husband was technically entitled to recover, in the wife's verdict. See Webber v. Jordan,
[2] It bears emphasis that these "inconsistency" situations are particularly appropriate ones for enforcing the preservation requirement. This is so because if in either case both verdicts were returned for reconsideration by the jury, it could resolve the conflict adversely to the interest of the party complaining on appeal. Thus, in the situation involved in Savoca and this case, the jury might well have vacated the injured spouse's substantial verdict rather than granting one in the derivative claim; similarly, had the defendant in Holland America Cruise, Inc. requested reconsideration, the jury was free to add a verdict in the derivative case, instead of vacating the one for the injured party. In these circumstances, the respective party's failure to seek jury reconsideration below is properly regarded as a conscious choice of strategy which effects a binding waiver of any contention that he was entitled on appeal to the relief he consciously, and for good reason, eschewed at trial. See State v. Cumbie,
[3] See supra note 1.
[4] Fairbanks, supra, in itself shows the harmony between our holding and those exemplified by Savoca and Holland America Cruises. In Fairbanks, supra, although neither complained at trial, both sides appealed from jury verdicts identical to the ones involved here. As in Holland America Cruises, the defendant's claim of inconsistency was rejected for lack of preservation below; the plaintiff-spouse however successfully contended that her zero verdict was inadequate and won a new trial on that basis on appeal.
[5] See supra note 1.
[6] The basis of this position is self-evidently the fear that a new trial on both claims might result in a smaller total than the one already returned ostensibly for Mrs. Cowart alone; its assertion can only lend support for our "founded suspicion" that her $400,000 already includes his damages.
[7] It may be that this result renders what has gone before technically unnecessary to the disposition of the case and therefore dictum. We consider that the effort may nonetheless have been worthwhile in aiding in the understanding of a troublesome area of the Florida law.
