64 Ohio St. 3d 601 | Ohio | 1992
The two issues before this court are whether the trial court committed reversible error when it ordered the parties, when they had objected, to participate in a videotape trial, and whether the trial court committed prejudicial error when it provided the jury with a separate interrogatory concerning damages for past and future “loss of life’s enjoyment.” For
I
Videotape Trials
Sandusky Cement’s sole proposition of law, it asserts that a court order to conduct a videotape trial over the objections of both adversarial parties constitutes “an abuse of discretion” by a trial court. In order to thoroughly appreciate the breadth of this issue, a brief background on videotape trials is indicated. The videotape trial format discussed here is not the presentation into evidence at a conventional trial of videotapes of certain evidence such as the testimony of expert witnesses. The videotape trial that we discuss in this case is a trial in which all of the testimony, including that of any expert witnesses, is prerecorded on videotape and later shown to the jury on a video screen. Trial by videotape is a modern process presented as an alternative to traditional trial methods. The basic premise behind such trials is that they save judicial resources by providing a quicker means for bringing a case to trial.
The first videotape trial, McCall v. Clemens, No. 39301, took place in the Common Pleas Court of Erie County, Ohio, on November. 18, 1971, under the direction of Judge James L. McCrystal. See Symposium, First Videotape Trial: Experiment in Ohio (1972), 21 Defense L.J. 266; McCrystal, Videotape Trials: Relief for our Congested Courts (1973), 49 Denver L.J. 463.
In response to McCall, this court, under the direction of then Chief Justice C. William O’Neill (see McCrystal & Young, Pre-Recorded Videotape Trials— An Ohio Innovation [1973], 39 Brooklyn L.Rev. 560, 561), submitted new Civ.R. 40, effective July 1, 1972, which provides that:
Effective September 1, 1972, former S.CtSup.R. 15 (superseded by C.P.Sup.R. 12[B] and M.C.Sup.R. 10[B]) set forth specific guidelines for the use of videotaped testimony. C.P.Sup.R. 12(B) provides, in pertinent part:
“Videotape Trials.
“(1) Authority. Videotape trials are authorized by Civil Rule 40. In videotape trials, videotape is the exclusive medium of presenting testimony irrespective of the availability of the individual witness to testify in person. All testimony is recorded on videotape and the limitations of Civil Rule 32 upon the use of depositions do not apply.
“(2) Initiation of Videotape Trial. By agreement of the parties and with the consent of the trial judge all testimony and appropriate evidence may be presented by videotape. The trial judge may order the recording of all testimony and evidence on videotape in an appropriate case. In determining whether to order a videotape trial, the trial judge, after consultation with counsel, shall consider the costs involved, the nature of the action and the nature and amount of testimony.”
Judge McCrystal, writing a number of articles on the subject, has pointed out what are thought to be some distinct advantages in the use of prerecorded videotape trials.
In reviewing the parties’ objections to the videotape trial in the present case, we note that one of their concerns was the impairment of the jury’s ability to judge the credibility of the testimony. In the parties’ joint objection to videotape trial, filed on January 6, 1989, they stated that:
“The testimony of the fact witnesses of Plaintiff and Defendant are [sic ] so contradictory as to make the crucial issue one of credibility and the limited nature of videotape testimony does not offer the jury a full and complete opportunity to judge the credibility of such witnesses as to body language, attitude and appearance before and after taking the stand or the interplay between attorney-questioner and the witness * * *.”
Sandusky Cement argues strenuously here that any advantages of conducting a trial by videotape must be balanced against the disadvantages of conducting a trial by such means. Basically, Sandusky Cement argues that there are two major disadvantages of conducting a trial by such means.
Judges McCrystal and Maschari present many sound arguments in favor of prerecorded videotape trials, and the empirical data from their use in Erie County are very strong. See McCrystal & Maschari, Will Electronic Technology Take the Witness Stand? (1980), 11 U.Tol.L.Rev. 239. However, the opposition also has a number of valid points, including the fact that videotape trials have not gained widespread use, and are all but confined to Erie County.
However this debate may ultimately be concluded, we find valid reasons to support the use of prerecorded videotape trials. In the appropriate case, the prerecording of trials by videotape may prove to be as beneficial as the videotaping of certain kinds of evidence, such as expert testimony, that is almost universally utilized. In any event, we currently have rules promulgated by this court which authorize this process. Until such authorization is withdrawn, this court must fairly interpret and apply the rules.
In determining whether the trial judge in the case sub judice erred in ordering a videotape trial over the objections of both parties, we must look to the applicable rules
Under Civ.R. 40, as further detailed in C.P.Sup.R. 12(B)(2), a prerecorded videotape trial may take place by the agreement of the parties, or where the court orders such a trial “in an appropriate case” even though all of the parties, or only some of the parties, object.
C.P.Sup.R. 12(B)(2) provides in pertinent part: “In determining whether to order a videotape trial, the trial judge, after consultation with counsel, shall consider the costs involved, the nature of the action and the nature and amount of testimony.” (Emphasis added.) The word “shall” is mandatory rather than directory and requires the court to consider the factors after consultation with counsel.
Accordingly, it is reversible error for a trial court to order a prerecorded videotape trial over the objections of all parties to an action unless the court reflects in a journal entry that it has, pursuant to C.P.Sup.R. 12(B), consulted with the attorneys for the parties and considered the costs involved, the nature of the action and the nature and amount of testimony, that these factors taken together indicate a compelling reason to conduct the trial by videotape and that no cognizable prejudice will be suffered by the parties. In considering whether such error was prejudicial, the reviewing court should take into consideration the parties’ constitutional right to trial by jury, giving substantial emphasis to the fact that all parties objected to a videotape trial. The reviewing court should also consider any other factors that may have induced the trial court to order videotaping, with the underlying premise being that the trial court, under such circumstances, should be extremely cautious in entering such an order. When the reviewing court cannot find any compelling
Where there is an objection to a videotape trial, and the trial court has consulted with counsel for the parties and filed an entry setting forth that the court has considered the factors of the rule, but still has ordered a videotape trial, a reviewing court should limit its inquiry to whether the trial court abused its discretion.
In the case at bar the trial court failed to respond to the parties’ joint objections to the court’s order to conduct a videotape trial. There was no journal entry reflecting that the trial court had consulted with counsel for the parties concerning their objections, no entry that the court had considered the factors set forth in C.P.Sup.R. 12(B)(2), and no entry of any findings of the court in this regard. Therefore, we conclude, in the absence of any supportive material to the contrary, that the trial court erred in this regard to the prejudice of Sandusky Cement, the party yet complaining of the videotape trial held over its objection.
Therefore, the judgment must be vacated and the cause remanded for a new trial.
II
Loss of Enjoyment of Ufe
In the Fantozzis’ sole proposition of law on cross-appeal they allege that “loss of enjoyment of life is sufficiently different in nature from pain and suffering as to constitute a separate, identifiable item of damages.”
Damages based on “loss of enjoyment of life” have been identified by a number of names or descriptions by legal authors and judicial opinions throughout the country, but in essence it is an allegation in a tort action that the plaintiff’s capacity to enjoy certain activities of life has been impaired as a result of personal injury. See 22 American Jurisprudence 2d (1988), Damages, Section 272. In Huff v. Tracy (1976), 57 Cal.App.3d 939, 943, 129 Cal.Rptr. 551, 553, this type of damage was referred to as “physical impairment which limits the plaintiff’s capacity to share in the amenities of life.” This damage connotes the deprivation of certain pleasurable sensations and enjoyment through impairment or destruction of the capacity to engage in activities formerly enjoyed by the injured plaintiff.
Although this court has not specifically discussed the loss of enjoyment of life as an element of damages in a civil action, in Binns v. Fredendall (1987), 32 Ohio St.3d 244, 513 N.E.2d 278, we made a general reference to it as one element of allowable damages: “ * * * [R]ecovery for negligently inflicted
The court of appeals below, in citing Binns, stated that: “We interpret the Binns holding as being applicable only to actions where severe emotional injuries have resulted from the plaintiffs involvement in and witnessing of an accident in which a loved one is killed or injured. The present case involves a situation in which the plaintiff claims loss of enjoyment of life due to the physical injuries themselves. * * * ” The court of appeals concluded that Binns is not applicable to this case and, therefore, the trial court had erred in submitting the interrogatory on the damage element of loss of enjoyment of life to the jury.
It must be remembered that Binns dealt with a plaintiff who. was involved in an auto accident in which a close companion was killed in a gruesome manner. This court recognized that she could recover for her own physical injuries, for the extreme mental anguish and emotional distress she encountered from her witnessing of the accident, and also for loss of the enjoyment of life that she would have otherwise experienced with her deceased close companion. The court within that context limited the right to recover for such injuries “to those plaintiffs directly involved and contemporaneously injured in the same motor vehicle and accident with the deceased or other injured person.” Id., 32 Ohio St.3d at 247, 513 N.E.2d at 281.
In Binns, this court recognized that in certain situations where the plaintiff has received physical injuries as well as severe emotional injuries caused by the death or injury of another, the factfinder may consider claimed loss of the enjoyment of life as a part of the damages assessed. The language in Binns was not intended to limit the recovery of such damages to actions seeking recovery for emotional injuries which have resulted from the plaintiffs involvement in an accident in which he witnessed a loved one being killed or injured. Binns did not intend to prevent an injured party in an action seeking damages for physical injuries from also recovering damages for impairment of the plaintiff’s usual pleasurable activities. Further, Binns did not discuss whether such a loss is a separate element of damages concerning which separate jury instructions may be given, and whether interrogatories for separate findings of damages may be submitted.
We have noted that recently in Ohio, as elsewhere, plaintiffs’ attorneys have more frequently included an additional element of damage, which they generally term “loss of enjoyment of life,” in complaints in personal injury actions. Although this court in Binns did recognize that “loss of enjoyment of life” could be considered by the jury in assessing damage in the type of case presented therein, the question remains for our consideration whether such damage, be it known as loss of enjoyment of life or by another name, may be allowed in other types of negligence actions, and may be considered as a separate element of damages in the jury instructions, interrogatories submitted to the jury, and in a special verdict form.
Courts throughout the United States have differed on whether damages may be awarded for loss of enjoyment of life in addition to, and separate from, an award for other elements of damages such as pain and suffering, or an award for general damages. A number of state courts of last resort have recognized the loss of enjoyment of life as a proper element of damages for
There are also a considerable number of cases from other states that, while disallowing or discouraging the claim of loss of enjoyment of life as a separate element of damages with its own separate jury instruction and separate award, have held that such claim could be properly considered by the jury in arriving at the amount for general damages. See, e.g., Leiker v. Gafford (1989), 245 Kan. 325, 778 P.2d 823; McDougald v. Garber (1989), 73 N.Y.2d 246, 538 N.Y.S.2d 937, 536 N.E.2d 372; Leonard v. Parrish (Minn.App.1988), 420 N.W.2d 629; Nussbaum v. Gibstein (1989), 73 N.Y.2d 912, 539 N.Y.S.2d 289, 536 N.E.2d 618; Huff v. Tracy, supra, 57 Cal.App.3d 939, 129 Cal.Rptr. 551. These courts have, in the main, determined that such a claim could not be a separate award, in that the plaintiff’s loss of enjoyment of life is encompassed within one of the established elements of damages such as pain and suffering or permanency of injuries. Accordingly, the court in Leiker v. Gafford, supra, stated: “One of the strongest arguments that has been advanced as a reason for not recognizing loss of enjoyment of life as a separate category of damages is that it duplicates or overlaps other categories of damages, such as permanent disability or pain and suffering.” Id., 245 Kan. at 339, 778 P.2d at 834. See, generally, Hermes, Loss of Enjoyment of Life — Duplication of Damages Versus Full Compensation (1987), 63 N.D.L.Rev. 561; Annotation, Loss of Enjoyment of Life as a Distinct Element or Factor in Awarding Damages for Bodily Injury (1984), 34 A.L.R. 4th 293; Comment, Loss of Enjoyment of Life as a Separate Element of Damages (1981), 12 Pac.LJ. 965.
How each jurisdiction has treated the issue of whether loss of enjoyment of life is an element of damage separate from other allowable damages such as pain and suffering, or permanent disability, has been dependent upon the elements of damages recognized in that particular state by statute, court rule, or case law. In like manner, in order to answer the query presented here, we have looked to our Ohio laws and to Ohio Jury Instructions (1992) (“OJI”).
The pertinent instruction contained in OJI is Section 23.01, Personal Injury, which provides in part as follows:
“1. If you find for the plaintiff, you will determine from the preponderance of the evidence an amount of money that will reasonably compensate the plaintiff for the actual (injury) (damage) proximately caused by the negligence of the defendant.
“3. PERMANENT INJURY AND EXPENSE. You will note that the plaintiff also claims (that the injury is permanent) (that plaintiff will incur future expense) (that he will experience pain or disability in the future). As to such claim(s), no damage may be found except that which is reasonably certain to exist as a proximate result of the (injury) (collision).”
Most important in the discussion of the issue presented here is subsection 2, providing that “[i]n determining this amount, you will consider * * * the ability or inability to perform usual activities * * *.” Also important here is subsection 3, which provides for claims that the plaintiff “will experience * * * disability in the future,” and instructs the jury that damages therefor may be awarded only where proximate cause is shown.
These jury instructions permit consideration of evidence of claimed damages for the plaintiffs inability, presently and prospectively, to perform the usual activities of life, such as the basic mechanical bodily movements that accommodate walking, climbing stairs, feeding oneself, driving a car, etc. These instructions also permit the jury to consider evidence of the plaintiffs inability to perform the usual activities of life that have actually provided distinct pleasure to this particular plaintiff, these being the so-called “hedonic” damages.
Pursuant to these instructions, the jury is to determine, from the evidence adduced, the amount of money that will reasonably compensate the plaintiff for the damage proximately caused by the negligence of the defendant. In determining such amount the jury may, among other elements, consider the plaintiffs ability or inability to perform his usual activities, basic and hedonic (Section 23.01[2]) and also may consider the claim that the physical disability will continue in the future (Section 23.01[3]) to prevent the plaintiff from performing his usual activities.
As reflected in Section 23.01 of OJI, juries in Ohio are already permitted to award damages for what generally has been referred to as “loss of enjoyment of life.” Therefore, it is not necessary to create a new and additional element of damage here that would encompass this claimed loss and resulting damage.
Accordingly, in current practice, the plaintiff may adduce evidence concerning his inability, because of the injury, to perform certain activities that he had usually performed. The trial counsel may argue such element of damage
One of the elements of compensatory damages that is universally allowed in actions for personal injuries is the pain and suffering endured by the plaintiff as a result of the injury. In addition to compensation for the physical pain, the jury is permitted to award compensation for the mental suffering endured. See Smith v. Pittsburgf[h], Fort Wayne & Chicago Ry. Co. (1872), 23 Ohio St. 10, 18-19; Flory v. New York Central RR. Co., supra.
In Black’s Law Dictionary (6 Ed.1990) 1109, we find that “pain and suffering” is a “[tjerm used to describe not only physical discomfort and distress but also mental and emotional trauma which are recoverable as elements of damage in torts. * * * ”
Generally, pain and suffering has been viewed as a unitary concept. Accordingly, it was stated in Capelouto v. Kaiser Found. Hosps. (1972), 7 Cal.3d 889, 892-893, 103 Cal.Rptr. 856, 859, 500 P.2d 880, 883, that: “In general, courts have not attempted to draw distinctions between the elements of ‘pain’ on the one hand, and ‘suffering’ on the other; rather, the unitary concept of ‘pain and suffering’ has served as a convenient label under which a plaintiff may recover not only for physical pain but for fright, nervousness, grief, anxiety, worry, mortification, shock, humiliation, indignity, embarrassment, apprehension, terror or ordeal.” (Footnote omitted.)
In Ohio, an action in tort may allege, and proof may be offered on both pain from physical injuries and suffering from mental or emotional disturbance. However, in Ohio there need not be a contemporaneous physical injury in order to allege damages for emotional distress. Schultz v. Barberton Glass Co. (1983), 4 Ohio St.3d 131, 4 OBR 376, 447 N.E.2d 109, syllabus; Paugh v. Hanks (1983), 6 Ohio St.3d 72, 6 OBR 114, 451 N.E.2d 759, paragraph two of the syllabus.
As noted, case law generally and repeatedly refers to “pain and suffering” as an element of damages that is recoverable in Ohio. However, it is interesting to note that OJI Section 23.01(2), in setting forth the elements that a jury may consider in awarding damages, does not refer to “suffering” but only to “the pain that was experienced.” However, at Section 23.04, Mathematical Formula, OJI does refer to “pain and suffering.”
In a discussion of this area of the law, we find in the Comment, Loss of Enjoyment of Life as a Separate Element of Damages (1981), 12 Pac.LJ. 965, supra, the following:
“In conclusion, pain can be characterized broadly as physiological while suffering is more appropriately deemed psychological. Whereas pain refers to the physical sensations resulting from the corporeal injury, suffering is concerned primarily with the person's emotional reaction to these sensations. * * * [HJowever, neither pain nor suffering deals with the limitations on the person’s life created by the injury.” Id. at 972.
The damage with which we deal here is the claimed impairment of one’s physical capacity to enjoy the amenities of life. This concept entails providing compensation for the deprivation of one’s ability to engage in those activities, and perform those functions, which were part of, and provided pleasure to, one’s life prior to the injury. This type of claimed damage is distinguishable from those types of damages that are based upon recognized categories of
In a review and weighing of all factors involved in this discussion, we find it reasonable to treat the claimed inability to perform usual functions (both basic and hedonic) as a separate and distinct element of damage. As noted previously, such an element of damages has already been reflected in OJI Section 23.01(2). It would seem to follow that if Ohio has seen fit to provide for such a statement of law within its standard jury instructions, then the determination of such damage may be made by the jury separate from the other elements of allowable damage that it considers.
We believe that such a conclusion is reasonable based upon a number of factors. First, we proceed upon the premise that the primary purpose for awarding damages in a personal injury action is to, as best that a jury award may do so, restore the plaintiff to the position occupied prior to the tortious act occasioning the injuries. Giving Ohio’s standard jury instructions, and permitting a separate interrogatory and jury finding on this damage, would help the jury understand exactly what claimed damages it is addressing. This adds more clarity and objectivity to this part of the jury determination.
Further, we believe a very significant basis of our conclusion here is the importance of facilitating appellate review of jury damage awards. With such separate findings by the jury being available, not only may counsel for the litigants more accurately determine the need for appeal, but the review process on appeal would be enhanced.
Accordingly, we conclude that although it may have been error on the part of the trial court to submit a special interrogatory on the overbroad element of damage known as “loss of enjoyment of life” rather than the focused element entitled “inability to perform usual activities,” the error was not prejudicial, in that we herein specifically authorize the latter in accord with the language of OJI.
In the appropriate case, where there have been allegations of and evidence adduced on the plaintiff’s inability to perform usual activities, occasioned by the injuries received, the trial court shall give these additional instructions to the jury:
“If you find from the greater weight of the evidence that, as a proximate cause of the injuries sustained, the plaintiff has suffered a permanent disability which is evidenced by way of the inability to perform the usual activities of life such as the basic mechanical body movements of walking, climbing stairs, feeding oneself, driving a car, etc., or by way of the inability to perform the plaintiff’s usual specific activities which had given pleasure to this particular plaintiff, you may consider, and make a separate award for, such damages.
“Any amounts that you have determined will be awarded to the plaintiff for any element of damages shall not be considered again or added to any other element of damages. You shall be cautious in your consideration of the damages not to overlap or duplicate the amounts of your award which would result in double damages. For example, any amount of damages awarded to the plaintiff for pain and suffering must not be awarded again as an element of damages for the plaintiff’s inability to perform usual activities. In like manner, any amount of damages awarded to the plaintiff for the inability to perform usual activities must not be considered again as an element of damages awarded for the plaintiff’s pain and suffering, or any other element of damages.”
Ill
Conclusion
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the court of appeals is reversed on the issue of the propriety of requiring the parties to submit to a videotape trial over their joint objection, and on the issue of the
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
. The McCall trial was a civil tort case where only the extent of damages was in dispute. McCall was the first case in which all testimony was prerecorded and presented to a jury in a continuous sequence. The trial was conducted outside the presence of Judge McCrystal. However, he edited the videotape before trial in order to remove inadmissible evidence objected to by counsel. The attorneys were provided the opportunity, prior to trial, to discuss the judge’s rulings on their objections. Opening statements and, of course, voir dire were presented live. Following closing arguments, the judge gave his instructions, via videotape, to the jury who then commenced deliberations. See Staff Note, Civ.R. 40; and Kornblum, Videotape in Civil Cases (1972), 24 Hastings L.J. 9, 27.
. These advantages include:
“(1) the trial flows without interruption from objections, bench conferences, delays for witnesses, counsel’s pauses, client conferences and chamber retreats; (2) maximum utilization of juror time is achieved; (3) the time required for a given trial is shortened considerably; (4) the trial can be scheduled, with certainty, for a specific day; (5) the witnesses can be presented in the desired order, obviating the need for adjustment to availability at the last moment; (6) the chance of mistrial is greatly reduced; (7) there is no need to recess for the preparation of instructions; (8) directed verdict motions are decided when the tapes are previewed and do not infringe on courtroom time; (9) opening statements should be more effective with knowledge of precisely what the evidence will show; (10) the judge need not be present during the viewing of the tape, freeing him for other duties; (11) the presence of the lawyers is not required during the viewing of the tape; (12) it is possible for judge and counsel to conduct simultaneous trials; (13) trial preparation can be more effectively scheduled and the taping may be in the most convenient order of witness availability; (14) last-minute preparation is eliminated; (15) time is afforded for study of evidentiary questions; (16) testimony on location is facilitated; (17) elimination of live trial impediments gives the jury a comprehensive related view of the entirety of the case; (18) the tape can serve as the transcript of proceedings on appeal; (19) retrial is facilitated; (20) extrajudicial judge influence through reaction to witnesses and comments to counsel is reduced; (21) the court need no longer resort to the fiction that a juror can disregard what he has heard in accordance with the judge’s instructions.” McCrystal & Young, PreRecorded Videotape Trials — An Ohio Innovation, supra, 39 Brooklyn L.Rev. at 563-564. See,
. In Doret, Trial by Videotape — Can Justice be Seen to be Done? (1974), 47 Temp.L.Q. 228, 241, it is suggested that videotape has its effect on the information offered to the jury in a number of ways:
“There will be: (1) a loss of the completeness in the information communicated, (2) an electronic distortion of the information communicated, (3) a limiting in the information carrying capacity of the trial, (4) perceptual distortions in the information communicated, (5) a loss in the veracity of the information communicated and (6) an innate biasing of the information communicated.”
In this article the delicate thread of communication between witness and jury was aptly described:
“Testimony is a process of communication between witness and jury. Although the jury is normally silent, the process is decidedly not a one-way communication since the reactions of members of the jury tell the witness a great deal about the impression he, and his testimony, are making. If we view the process of giving testimony as a communications ‘system,’ it is clear that the trial provides the witness with a built-in ‘feedback’ mechanism. Videotape, however, by allowing the separation of the witness from the jury’s presence, eliminates the opportunity to receive this feedback.” (Footnotes omitted.) Id. at 250.
Another specific concern about the use of videotape trials is that a greater potential may exist during a videotape trial than in a conventional trial for a witness to falsify his or her testimony given the detachment of the jury from the witness. Id. at 244. A live trial as opposed to a videotape trial has all the essential participants convened in the courtroom, the parties confront each other, and the jury is present along with the general public. This “charged” atmosphere may elicit truthtelling and expose falsehood.
. Although the constitutionality of Civ.R. 40 and C.P.Sup.R. 12(B) is not challenged in these proceedings, we must still determine whether the litigants’ rights were violated by the trial judge’s apparent failure to take into account the costs involved, the nature of the action and the nature and amount of testimony.
. We will not address the constitutionality of Civ.R. 40 or C.P.Sup.R. 12(B) since they have not been challenged and there are alternative procedural grounds on which to deal with the issues before us. See State ex rel. Lieux v. Westlake (1951), 154 Ohio St. 412, 43 O.O. 343, 96 N.E.2d 414, paragraph one of the syllabus (“[c]onstitutional questions will not be decided until the necessity for their decision arises”).
. C.P.Sup.R. 12(B)(2) contains both the words “shall” and “may” in succeeding sentences. As a general rule of statutory construction, when “shall” and “may” are used in close juxtaposition there is a presumption that they are to be given their ordinary meaning. See, generally, Wachendorf v. Shaver (1948), 149 Ohio St. 231, 36 O.O. 554, 78 N.E.2d 370, paragraph five of the syllabus.