Lead Opinion
[¶ 1.] In this appeal, we hold that the circuit court erred in allowing an economist to assign the plaintiff a disability rating. We affirm the jury’s verdict on negligence, but reverse for a new trial on damages.
Background
[¶2.] On March 3, 1995, James Garland and Ralph Rossknecht collided at thé intersection of Haines Avenue and Crazy Horse Street in Rapid City, South Dakota. Haines runs north and south and Crazy Horse, east and west. The intersection is controlled by stop signs on Crazy Horse. Vehicles on Haines have the right-of way. Rossknecht testified that he was traveling west on Crazy Horse and approached the intersection intending to turn left onto Haines. He" looked first to the right and then to the left and “felt there was no approaching traffic.” He then proceeded into the intersection and while “double-checking” traffic to the north he first saw Garland’s vehicle “coming from' [the] right side.” Garland testified that he was southbound on Haines, traveling approximately thirty-two or thirty-three miles per hour. The speed limit on Haines is thirty-five. Garland was halfway through the intersection when he saw Rossknecht’s Jeep “coming at [him].” The collision occurred in Garland’s lane of traffic. The right corner of Rossknecht’s front bumрer struck Garland’s left rear wheel. According to Garland, the collision caused his car to “scoot” or “fishtail” toward “the direction ... he hit me.”
[¶ 3.] Garland reported no medical problems at the time, but after he went home his neck felt “tingly and, um just weird.” When he awoke the next day, he had a “сonstant, nagging headache feeling in [his] neck.” He sought medical treatment from a chiropractor, Dr. Garry Gor-such, for problems with “cold feet, neck pain, fatigue, tension, mid-back stiffness and numbness in [his] fingers.” Before the accident, Garland had seen Dr. Gor-such s occasionally for wellnеss check-ups. After the accident, Garland underwent an extensive course of treatment with Dr. Gorsuch and eventually with Gorsuch’s partner, Dr. Scherr, for pain in his back and neck. The treatments lasted from March 1995 to October 1996.
[¶ 4.] Scherr concluded that Garland suffered from a seven perсent whole person permanent impairment. This degree of physical impairment, according to Scherr, would restrict Garland’s ability to sit in one position for long periods and work or lift with his arms overhead. Schérr’s assessment was limited to physical impairment. He would not assign a vocational disability rating, as he felt that a vocational rehábilitationist should make that determination. In Scherr’s view, physical impairment ratings do not translate into disability ratings because “disability is based upbn what you cannot do in regards to a given employment.”
[¶ 5.] Garland brought a negligence action against Rossknecht, seeking damages for medical bills, pain and suffering, lost wages, and dimipished earning capacity. In addition to the expertise of his two treating chiropractors, Garland offered the testimony of Don Frankenfeld, a forensic economist. Frankenfeld assessed Garland’s earning capacity in his chosen field, graphic design.
[¶ 6.] In the process of calculating reduced earning capacity, Frankenfeld concluded that Garland suffered from a ten percent “disability” or earning capacity reduction. When questioned about how he arrived at this percentage, Frankenfeld stated, “it was a judgment call.” In fact, his opinion was based solely on information conveyed from Garland. Garland reported that when he worked on a four-hour graphic design prоject, he had to take a half hour break. Frankenfeld extrapolated a half hour break every four hours into one hour of nonproductivity a day. He then took “one and divide[d] it by eight, one hour a day out of an eight-hour day is one-eighth, twelve and a half percent.” Then he discounted the rating to ten percent.
[¶ 7.] Frankenfeld admitted that impairment ratings do not translate directly into disability ratings and that he had no expertise in converting “impairment ratings into physical vocational limitations.” Furthermore, he conceded “a vocational expert has competence that I do not have to take physical limitations and translate them into vocational limitations.” After hearing this testimony, the circuit court nonetheless allowed Frankenfeld to testify without limitation. Frankenfeld offered the jury a range of figures representing the present vаlue of any reduction in Garland’s earning capacity. Included in that range was a calculation based on a ten percent disability and an eight dollar per hour rate of earning, which produced a loss of $90,744. Frankenfeld also calculated damages based on higher and lower disability ratings.
[¶ 8.] At the end of the two day trial, the jury returned a general verdict of $50,600 for Garland. Rossknecht appeals.
1. Disability Rating
[¶ 9.] Rossknecht urges us to hold that the circuit court erred in allowing an economist to assign a disability rating for Garland, especially as it was based only on Garland’s self-appraisal of his work capacities. Trial courts enjoy broad discretion in ruling on the admissibility of expert opinions. In re Estate of Dokken,
[¶ 10.] The circuit court found that Rossknecht’s foundational objections went to “credibility, not admissibility,” reasoning that the jury should decide whether the information on which Frankenfeld relied was credible. It is true that challenges to the facts underlying an expert’s opinion present issues for a jury. Stormo v. Strong,
[¶ 11.'] Daubert and its progeny qffer general guides for courts to consider in assessing reliability: testing, peer review, error rate, and general acceptance. See Daubert,
[¶ 12.] Frankenfeld, a forensic economist, specializes in projecting earning loss-over time, not in assessing vocational disabilities. He conceded' as much in the pretrial hearing: “[a] vocational expert has competence that I do not have to take physical limitations and translate those into vocational limitations. That’s not an аrea that I get into, but it is possible.” According to his chiropractor, Garland suffers a seven percent physical impairment rating; however, a physical impairment does not directly translate into any vocational disability. Marnette v. Morgan,
[¶ 13.] Other jurisdictions have addressed the proper scope of an economist’s testimony in claims for earning impairment. In Lamphere v. Agriew,
[¶ 14.] Garland refers to our statement in Mamette that disabilities may be proven with testimony from an expert “other than a doctor.” Marnette,
[¶ 15.] The circuit court abused its discrеtion in allowing the economist’s opinion on Garland’s percentage of disability.
2. Denial of Directed Verdict
[¶ 16.] Rossknecht contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for directed verdict. He claims that Garland made an insufficient showing of negligence. “If any legally sufficient basis exists to support a verdict for the nonmoving party, the motion must be denied.” Jurrens v. Lorenz Mfg. Co.,
[¶ 17.] Rossknecht relies on the following language in Carpenter: “the mere occurrence of an accident in a protected intersection will not of itself establish negligence agаinst the unfavored driver.” Id. at ¶ 16,
[¶ 18.] Rossknecht invokes his own trial testimony as undisputed proof that he acted reasonably and without negligence. Of course, the jury had to listen to both sides and consider the testimony in context with the vehicle damage. The right corner of Rossknecht’s bumper collided with the left rear wheel of Garland’s vehicle. Rossknecht ran into Garland’s vehicle as it proceeded through the intersection. “When witnesses testify that they did in fact look, the question whether they looked with the proper care and saw all that they should have seen is one of fact.” Carpenter,
[¶ 19.] Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for a new trial on damages.
Notes
. Garland was in high school at the time of the accident. In the time between the accident and the trial, he graduated from high school and enrolled in a graphic design program at Brooks College of Design and Merchandising.
. Frankenfeld offered the jury a range of calculations based on varying disability ratings and projected earnings. With a ten percent disability and earnings at minimum wage, for instance, he figured a loss of $76,681. He recalculated damages for earnings at eight dollars an hour, and twelve dollars an hour. He also gave the jury his calculations for disability ratings of five percent, seven percent, and twenty percent.
. Testimony on Garland’s vocational disability was clearly relevant to his prayer for damages for his loss of earning capacity. Consequently our analysis focuses on the reliability of such testimony.
. In Mamette we cited our workers’ compensation case law defining the difference betweеn permanent medical impairment and vocational disability:
Permanent medical impairment is related directly to the health status of the individual, whereas disability can be determined only within the context of the personal, social, or occupational demands, or statutory or regulatory requirements that the individual is unable to meet as a result of the impairment.
Marnette,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part and dissenting in part).
[¶ 22.] I concur with the majority opinion on all issues except for its proposal for a partial remand. We should instead reverse and remand for a full trial on liability and damages.
[¶ 23.] There are ocсasions where a partial remand is an appropriate remedy. A partial remand is warranted when the errant part of the judgment below is severable from the rest of the trial. Kneip v. Unitedbank-Victoria,
[¶ 24.] This is a negligence action arising from a motor vehicle collision. The defendant, Rossknecht, has asserted as affirmative defenses that Garland was either contributorily negligent or assumed the risk of this collision. These defenses relate directly to the damage issue in this case. These defenses also relate directly to the negligence issue in this case. In this instance, a retrial for damages only would hamper a jury’s ability to grasp the proper view of this case. See Prouse v. Ransom,
, [¶ 25.] The proposеd bifurcated proceeding urged by the majority opinion is justified “only if the matter is clearly separable without unfairness to the parties.” Evans v. First National Bank of Bellville,
