111 Karen H. Larsen appeals from the judgment awarding her damages resulting from an automobile accident and from the trial court’s denial of her motion for new trial. She contends that the court erred in excluding some of her medical records and bills and a Social Security Administration
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶ 2 Larsen fell from her bicycle in November 1993, and suffered a broken hip and elbow. In September 1994, Robert C. Decker’s car collided with her car at an intersection, and she again sustained a number of injuries.
¶ 3 Decker admitted liability, and trial was confined to Larsen’s damages attributable to the auto accident. Although no doctor testified, deposition testimony of Doctors Bodell, Calkins, Calderone, and McLean was presented to the jury.
¶ 4 Larsen claimed a broken elbow, a left shoulder injury that required surgery, and aggravation of her hip injury. She admitted that no spinal damage resulted from the auto accident, but she claimed very significant and continuing back pain.
¶ 5 Decker disputed a connection between her shoulder complaints and the auto accident because Larsen had fallen on the left arm and hand in the bicycle accident, had reported shoulder pain before the auto accident, and diabetes might have contributed to her shoulder problems. Decker also disputed whether the accident had aggravated the prior hip injury and suggested that the back pain was due to aging and degenerative conditions unrelated to the accident. Although Larsen requested damages ranging from $150,000 to $300,000, the jury awarded $24,-040.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
¶ 6 We review the trial court’s evidentiary rulings for a clear abuse of discretion; we will not reverse unless unfair prejudice resulted,
see Gemstar Ltd. v. Ernst & Young,
¶ 7 Larsen argues, however, that we should exercise
de novo
review because interpretation of a rule or statute is a question of law, and the trial court misinterpreted the Arizona Rules of Evidence, citing
Perguson v. Tamis,
¶8 Before ruling on the proffered evidence, the trial court had to read and understand the evidentiary rules. The court, however, is entrusted with broad discretion in the application of those rules to specific items of evidence. Here, the court had to determine whether the SSA records were sufficiently trustworthy and whether sufficient foundation had been laid for admission of certain medical records. We review these determinations for an abuse of discretion.
See Gemstar,
B. Exclusion of the SSA Report
¶ 9 Hearsay evidence is excluded from trial because it cannot be subjected to cross-examination and cannot be probed for possible errors in perception, memory, sincerity, or clarity. See Morris K. Udall et al., Law of Evidence § 121 (3d ed.1991). The hearsay exception in Rule 803(8) (C) assumes that public agency reports avoid these problems.
¶ 11 Larsen argues that the SSA report and findings fall within the Rule’s parameters because the report is by a public agency on a matter it had a legal duty to report upon after an investigation made pursuant to legal authority. She analogizes to
State ex rel. Miller v. Tucson Associates Ltd. Partnership,
¶ 12 Larsen notes, however, that
Davis,
¶ 13 Nevertheless, the SSA finding that Larsen was permanently disabled from working and entitled to widow’s benefits was based on the physical injuries suffered in both accidents as documented by her medical records and on her subjective pain complaints. The trial court’s concern here appeared to be that the SSA proceedings were essentially ex parte, that the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) was not qualified as a medical expert, and that none of Larsen’s treating doctors had testified and been cross-examined in those proceedings. 2 The court concluded that the report was not sufficiently reliable under these circumstances.
¶ 14 We have found no Arizona case on point, but we do not find Larsen’s citation to
Goodman v. Boeing Co.,
¶ 15 We have also looked at federal court interpretations because our Rule is very similar to Federal Rule 803(8).
See Tucson Assocs.,
¶ 16 At least one court has rejected the argument that an author’s or investigator’s lack of expertise affects admissibility.
See Clark v. Clabaugh,
¶ 17 In this instance, we cannot say that the trial court committed legal error and thus abused its discretion in excluding the SSA report. Although we do not agree that the ALJ’s mere lack of medical expertise would justify exclusion, Larsen apparently was the sole source of the information provided to the SSA, 3 and no medical expert appeared or was cross-examined as to her condition or attempted to allocate the cause of her disability between the two accidents. Thus, the trial court could reasonably conclude that sufficient doubts about the report’s reliability existed when it was offered here to determine what share, if any, of Larsen’s injuries had been caused by Decker.
Medical Records and Bills c.
¶ 18 Larsen next contends that the trial court erred in excluding some of her medical records under Arizona Rule 803(6) and that all of them were admissible business records. The Rule provides that a “report, record, or data compilation, ... of ... conditions, opinions, or diagnoses” is admissible under circumstances not contested here. The Rule disallows such evidence on several grounds, including “to the extent that portions thereof lack an appropriate foundation.” Decker argues that the contents of some of the records were properly excluded because no foundation showed that the injuries recorded and corresponding bills for treatment resulted from the auto accident.
¶ 19 Whether business records are sufficiently reliable to satisfy this hearsay exception is for the trial court’s sound discretion.
See State v. Petzoldt,
¶ 20 The trial court excluded Exhibit 7, the records and bills of Dr. Chloupek, a medical doctor, and of Dr. Immerman, a chiropractor, both of whom treated Larsen shortly after the auto accident. The records included a patient’s medical history form, history of present complaint form, pain chart, report on x-rays, diagnosis, objective findings, and bills for services.
4
The court sustained Decker’s objection because Immerman re-took x-rays that had been taken the prior week during Larsen’s hospital stay and no testimony showed that either they or the chiropractic treatments were necessary be
cause
¶ 21 The trial court next admitted the report but not the bills of Dr. Calderone, a neurosurgeon whom Larsen had consulted for low back pain. He noted findings from a physical exam and a conclusion that “lumbar spine films ... show some mild degenerative disease.” He recommended another MRI and from it reported some “disc herniation” and “mild compression on the thecal sac and the SI nerve root.” In his deposition, Cal-derone stated that neither the physical examination nor x-rays revealed that Larsen’s back complaints were caused by the auto accident. The MRI showed degenerative disc conditions and, although he did not know the source of her back pain, he could not rule out the auto accident. The court agreed that no foundation established that Calderone’s bills were caused by and were reasonable and necessary results of the auto accident.
¶22 Exhibit 12 contained the records of Dr. Rogers, a chiropractic orthopedist, who Larsen testified had treated her for low back, hip, leg, neck, shoulder, and wrist pain. The packet included insurance claim forms and a diagnosis based on a 1995 MRI that found that Larsen’s condition was directly related to the two accidents. Her counsel conceded, however, that Rogers had treated Larsen for injuries from both accidents and had not divided the bills. The court sustained Decker’s objection because Rogers could have testified about the division but was not asked to do so.
¶23 The court also excluded Exhibits 14 and 15, which consisted only of insurance claim forms from Dr. Topper and Dr. Scott, both of whom treated Larsen in 1997. Topper apparently administered epidural injections and Scott chiropractic treatments. The court sustained Decker’s foundational objection.
¶ 24 We do not find an abuse of the trial court’s discretion in these rulings. Larsen had to establish a connection between the auto accident and the need for treatment from these doctors for injuries caused by the auto accident. Because she failed to do so, the court excluded the evidence.
¶ 25 Larsen asserts, however, that we no longer require that medical opinions satisfy the “reasonable degree of medical certainty” standard and thus that Calderone’s opinion of a
possible
link between the accident and Larsen’s back pain was enough to admit his bills. Whether Calderone’s equivocal testimony on causation was sufficient to permit introduction of his bills and the records of other doctors who treated Larsen for a multiplicity of complaints is best left for the trial court’s discretion. We find nothing to the contrary in
Butler v. Wong,
¶26 No testimony aside from Larsen’s positively attributed her back complaints to the auto accident, and Calderone’s equivocal testimony did not eliminate the other explanation — aging—as a cause. We find no abuse of discretion under these circumstances. Larsen’s medical records were not automatically admissible without some testimony to establish that treatment by certain doctors for injuries sustained in the auto accident was necessary.
D. Motion for New Trial
¶ 27 Third, Larsen argues that the trial court erred in denying her motion for new trial for insufficiency of the evidence. Trial courts have discretion to grant such a motion only when the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.
See Styles v. Ceranski
¶ 28 Larsen is entitled to recover in tort “those damages which are the direct and proximate consequence of the defendant’s wrongful acts.”
Valley Nat'l Bank v. Brown,
¶29 Unlike Anderson, in this case the evidence did not uniformly and clearly establish a causal connection between all of the medical bills offered and Decker’s conduct. As discussed above, much of the medical evidence was equivocal, and thus the jury had to determine how much damage to allocate to the auto accident. Even an apparently inadequate verdict may be adequate when the jury accepts some and rejects other evidence. See id. We find no error.
III. CONCLUSION
¶ 30 We affirm the judgment and the trial court’s denial of Larsen’s motion for new trial.
Notes
.
Rainey
did not decide whether Rule 803(8)(C), Federal Rules of Evidence, distinguished between fact and opinions on one hand and legal conclusions on the other.
See
. Larsen argues that the report should be admissible without cross-examination of the report’s author. The objection, however, was that the medical experts relied upon by the ALJ had not been cross-examined.
. In fact, the SSA decision was revisited because information came to light that Larsen had earned wages in 1995, although her application had denied any employment after 1994.
. Records of Dr. Bodell were included in the packet but these were later admitted with Dr. Bodell’s own records.
