DIONNE LICUDINE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. CEDARS-SINAI MEDICAL CENTER et al., Defendants and Appellants.
No. B268130
Second Dist., Div. Two
Sept. 29, 2016
3 Cal. App. 5th 881
COUNSEL
Horvitz & Levy, David M. Axelrad, Emily V. Cuatto, Moore McLennan, Raymond R. Moore and Drew N. Evans for Defendants and Appellants.
Howard A. Kapp for Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
HOFFSTADT, J.—During her senior year of college, plaintiff Dionne Licudine (plaintiff) suffered injury during a gallbladder surgery that will have lifelong repercussions. She sued for malpractice, and sought damages for the resulting diminution in her earning capacity. Before such damages may be awarded, a jury must (1) find the injury that the plaintiff sustained will result in a loss of earning capacity; and (2) assign a value to that loss by comparing what the plaintiff could have earned without the injury to what she can still earn with the injury. (See Fein v. Permanente Medical Group (1985) 38 Cal.3d 137, 153 [211 Cal.Rptr. 368, 695 P.2d 665] (Fein); Storrs v. Los Angeles Traction Co. (1901) 134 Cal. 91, 93 [66 P. 72] (Storrs).) The first threshold requirement is met only if the plaintiff is “reasonably certain to suffer a loss of future earnings.” (Robison v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co. (1962) 211 Cal.App.2d 280, 287-288 [27 Cal.Rptr. 260] (Robison).) But how certain must the jury be in fixing what the plaintiff could have earned without the injury? We know that a jury may not award speculative damages (Ferguson v. Lieff, Cabraser, Heimann & Bernstein (2003) 30 Cal.4th 1037, 1048 [135 Cal.Rptr.2d 46, 69 P.3d 965] (Ferguson)), and the cases reviewing lost earning capacity awards seem to apply a consistent, yet unstated standard. No case has yet articulated what that standard is. Today, we hold that the jury must fix a plaintiff‘s future earning capacity based on what it is “reasonably probable” she could have earned. Because the plaintiff in this case did not adduce any evidence to establish that it was reasonably probable she could have obtained employment as an attorney or any evidence on the earnings of lawyers, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the jury‘s $730,000 award for lost earning capacity was not supported by substantial evidence. What is more, given the unusual facts of this case, the court acted within its discretion in granting a new trial on damages rather than entering a judgment notwithstanding the verdict for the defendants. We consequently affirm the grant of a new trial on damages, and provide additional guidance as to a handful of evidentiary issues likely to arise during the retrial.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. Facts
In January 2012, plaintiff was a senior at the University of Southern California (USC) with a double major in political science and international relations. She was also the coxswain and captain of USC‘s women‘s rowing team, and stood a legitimate chance of being named to the national rowing team. She was planning to apply to law school to fulfill her “passion” to be a human rights lawyer.
When inserting the tube, however, defendant Ankur Gupta (Dr. Gupta) nicked a vein and caused substantial internal bleeding. This necessitated a change in plans. In order to repair the vein, extract the blood, and remove plaintiff‘s gallbladder, the attending physicians cut a six-inch opening in her abdomen. Although her gallbladder was successfully removed, the more invasive surgery necessitated an additional four weeks in the hospital, including a week in the intensive care unit. What is more, the saturation of plaintiff‘s digestive organs in her blood caused fibrous tissue called adhesions to form on and around those organs, which has resulted in pain, bloating and dysfunction in her digestive tract.
II. Procedural History
A. Lawsuit
Plaintiff sued Cedars and Dr. Gupta for malpractice.1
B. Evidence at trial
The matter proceeded to trial in May 2015.
At trial, plaintiff testified that she was able to return to school and graduate from USC in the spring of 2012, albeit with help from her mother, dispensation from her teachers, and use of an electronic wheelchair. Plaintiff also applied to, and was accepted by, four law schools to start in the fall of 2013. Two of the law schools—Suffolk Law School and New England School of Law—were in Boston, which plaintiff preferred so she could participate in the Boston rowing community. She explained that she did not apply to Harvard Law School because she did not have “straight As.” Plaintiff also applied to, and was accepted into, the Masters of Public Administration program at Pennsylvania State University. Plaintiff accepted the offers from Suffolk Law School and Penn State, and thereafter requested and was granted
Plaintiff‘s former rowing coach testified that more than half of the women who have served as coxswains have gone on to graduate school.
Plaintiff also called an expert witness in internal medicine. The expert opined that plaintiff‘s ongoing gastrointestinal problems would likely be with her for the rest of her life and that she will “continue to suffer pain, require medical evaluations, require medication, and may at some point require an emergent surgical operation for a[n] acute abdominal event.” The expert further opined that these consequences “would certainly impact [her] lifestyle decisions[,] including career choice [and] education.”
Plaintiff asked the trial court to take judicial notice of a printout from the website of the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics (Bureau). The printout indicated that the “median” annual salary for attorneys in 2012 was $113,530, but noted that “competition” for attorney positions was “strong[] because more students are graduating from law school each year than there are jobs available.” Although plaintiff filed her request prior to trial, the court entertained argument on the issue intermittently throughout the trial, and did not deny the request until all parties had rested. The court ultimately denied plaintiff‘s request on the ground that the power to judicially notice official government documents did not reach “the truth of the matter[s]” stated in those documents and that, as a result, the printout‘s probative value was substantially outweighed by the danger of confusing the issues and misleading the jury.
C. Jury verdict
The jury returned a special verdict finding Cedars and Dr. Gupta negligent, and awarded plaintiff a total of $1,045,000 in damages. More specifically, the jury awarded plaintiff $285,000 in past economic loss, $730,000 in future economic loss, $15,000 for past noneconomic loss, and $15,000 for future noneconomic loss.
D. Posttrial motions
Cedars and Dr. Gupta (collectively, defendants) moved for a new trial and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on several grounds, including the insufficiency of the evidence to support the jury‘s award of economic damages. Plaintiff moved for a new trial due to the inadequacy of the jury‘s award of noneconomic damages.
Defendants filed a timely notice of appeal.
DISCUSSION
Defendants appeal the trial court‘s order denying their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, arguing that (1) there was insufficient evidence to support plaintiff‘s claim for loss of earning capacity, and (2) the remedy for this lack of evidence is the entry of judgment awarding no such damages, not a new trial on damages. Plaintiff disputes both arguments. A party is entitled to judgment notwithstanding the verdict only if there is “no substantial evidence [to] support” that verdict. (Sweatman v. Department of Veterans Affairs (2001) 25 Cal.4th 62, 68 [104 Cal.Rptr.2d 602, 18 P.3d 29] (Sweatman); see
I. Forfeiture
As a threshold matter, plaintiff argues that defendants have forfeited their right to challenge the trial court‘s denial of their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict because they only generally attacked the sufficiency of the evidence, and did not specifically argue that plaintiff failed to introduce evidence quantifying her lost earning capacity. To be sure, a party attacking a jury‘s award of damages as excessive must first give the trial
II. Substantial Evidence
To assess whether the jury‘s award of damages for loss of earning capacity was supported by substantial evidence, we must (1) know what standard the jury must apply in awarding such damages, and (2) evaluate whether the evidence meets that standard.
A. Standard for assessing loss of earning capacity
1. Compensatory damages in general
A person who “suffers” a “loss or harm” to her person or property due to another‘s “unlawful act or omission” may sue for “damages” that “compensate” for all of the loss or harm proximately caused by that act or omission. (
Compensable damages are categorized as either “general” or “special.” General damages are those damages that “‘necessarily result from the act complained of . . .‘” (Beeman v. Burling (1990) 216 Cal.App.3d 1586, 1599 [265 Cal.Rptr. 719].) Put differently, general damages “‘flow from the injuries received.‘” (Treadwell v. Whittier (1889) 80 Cal. 574, 581 [22 P. 266].) Consequently, general damages are “implied by law” (Beeman, at p. 1599), and may be “inferred from the nature of the injury” itself (Connolly v. Pre-Mixed Concrete Co. (1957) 49 Cal.2d 483, 489 [319 P.2d 343] (Connolly); Hilliard v. A. H. Robins Co. (1983) 148 Cal.App.3d 374, 412 [196 Cal.Rptr. 117] (Hilliard)). General damages include damages for “pain [and] suffering, emotional distress, and other forms of detriment that are sometimes characterized as ‘subjective’ or not directly quantifiable.” [Citation.]” (Beeman, at p. 1599; see Thayer v. Kabateck Brown Kellner LLP (2012) 207 Cal.App.4th 141, 156 [143 Cal.Rptr.3d 17].) By contrast, special damages do not necessarily arise from the typical infliction of the injury and are instead the “out-of-pocket losses” “peculiar to the infliction of each respective injury.” [Citation.]” (Beeman, at pp. 1600, 1599.) Special damages include medical and related expenses as well as lost income. (Id. at p. 1599; Rest.2d Torts, § 924.)
When a plaintiff‘s injury interferes with her professional earnings, she can potentially recover general damages, special damages, or both. Retrospectively, she can seek the “loss of wages between the occurrence of the injury and the trial“; these are special damages. (Swanson v. Bogatin (1957) 149 Cal.App.2d 755, 758 [308 P.2d 918].) Prospectively, she can seek to recover for her loss of earning capacity; these are general damages. (Connolly, supra, 49 Cal.2d at p. 489 [“Loss of earning power is” “awarded for the loss of ability thereafter to earn money” and “is an element of general damages“]; Zibbell v. Southern Pacific Co. (1911) 160 Cal. 237, 251-252 [116 P. 513] (Zibbell).)
2. Damages for loss of earning capacity
A jury tasked with evaluating a plaintiff‘s prayer for prospective loss of earning capacity must answer two questions: (1) Did the plaintiff suffer a loss in her earning capacity as a result of her injury, and if so, (2) How is that loss to be valued?
a. Entitlement to damages for loss of earning capacity
The first question assesses whether the plaintiff‘s earning capacity was, in fact, damaged at all. It is a threshold question of entitlement. Consistent with the statutory requirement that a plaintiff is eligible only to recover damages for losses “certain to result in the future” (
b. Extent of damages for loss of earning capacity
The second question is a question of valuation. As its name suggests, a loss of earning capacity is the difference between what the plaintiff‘s earning capacity was before her injury and what it is after the injury. (Rest.2d Torts, § 924, com. d, p. 525 [“the difference, viewed as of the time of trial, between the value of the plaintiff‘s services as they will be in view of the harm and as they would have been had there been no harm“]; Fein, supra, 38 Cal.3d at p. 153, fn. 10 [adopting Restatement].) Because these damages turn on the plaintiff‘s earning capacity, the focus is “not [on] what the plaintiff would have earned in the future[,] but [on] what she could have earned.” (Hilliard, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at p. 412, italics added; Gargir v. B‘Nei Akiva (1998) 66 Cal.App.4th 1269, 1281 [78 Cal.Rptr.2d 557] (Gargir) [same]; see Storrs, supra, 134 Cal. at p. 93 [it is what the [plaintiff] was capable of earning, rather than what he was actually earning, that was to be considered by the jury“]; Strosk v. Howard Terminal Co. (1954) 129 Cal.App.2d 797, 799-800 [277 P.2d 828] [same]; Rodriguez v. McDonnell Douglas Corp. (1978) 87 Cal.App.3d 626, 656 [151 Cal.Rptr. 399] (Rodriguez) [” ‘[one‘s] earning capacity is not a matter of actual earnings’ “], disapproved on other grounds in Coito v. Superior Court (2012) 54 Cal.4th 480, 499 [142 Cal.Rptr.3d 607, 278 P.3d 860].) Consequently, proof of the plaintiff‘s prior earnings, while relevant to demonstrate earning capacity, is not a prerequisite to the award of these damages (e.g., Neumann v. Bishop (1976) 59 Cal.App.3d 451, 462 [130 Cal.Rptr. 786] (Neumann) [no “proof of actual earnings or income either before or after the injury” required]; Heiner v. Kmart Corp. (2000) 84 Cal.App.4th 335, 348, fn. 6 [100 Cal.Rptr.2d 854] (Heiner) [same]), nor a cap on the amount of those damages (e.g., Robison, supra, 211 Cal.App.2d at p. 287 [fact that plaintiff‘s actual earnings had not decreased prior to trial not a bar to loss of earning capacity damages]; Paxton v. County of Alameda (1953) 119 Cal.App.2d 393, 414-415 [259 P.2d 934] (Paxton)
A plaintiff‘s earning capacity without her injury is a function of two variables—the career(s) the plaintiff could have pursued and the salaries attendant to such career(s).
How is the jury to assess what career(s) are available to the plaintiff? Is the sky the limit? In other words, can a plaintiff urge the jury to peg her earning capacity to the salary of a world-class athlete, neuroscientist, or best-selling author just by testifying that is what she wanted to do? Or must the jury instead determine a plaintiff‘s earning capacity by reference to the career choices the plaintiff stood a realistic chance of accomplishing? We conclude some modicum of scrutiny by the trier of fact is warranted, and hold that the jury must look to the earning capacity of the career choices that the plaintiff had a reasonable probability of achieving.
We select this standard for five reasons.
First and foremost, the reasonable probability standard effectuates the standard our Supreme Court has long articulated. In Zibbell, supra, 160 Cal. 237, the court held that a plaintiff‘s pre-injury earning capacity was properly pegged to the “business, vocation, trade or profession” for which the “plaintiff had shown himself fitted and qualified” to undertake based on “the nature of his skill and experience.” (Zibbell, supra, 160 Cal. at pp. 248, 249; accord, Neumann, supra, 59 Cal.App.3d at p. 462; Osterode v. Almquist (1948) 89 Cal.App.2d 15, 19, 20 [200 P.2d 169].) More generally, the court in Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern California (2012) 55 Cal.4th 747, 774-775 [149 Cal.Rptr.3d 614, 288 P.3d 1237] (Sargon) held that ” ‘[t]he law requires . . . that some reasonable basis of computation of damages be used.’ ” Where a plaintiff is not already “fitted and qualified” for the career she seeks to use to define her earning capacity, Zibbell and Sargon implicitly suggest that the
Second, looking to the careers a plaintiff has a reasonable probability of achieving is consistent with the standard used to assess a business‘s prospective lost profits, which also looks to what profits are “reasonably probable.” (Nelson v. Reisner (1958) 51 Cal.2d 161, 171-172 [331 P.2d 17]; Mammoth Lakes Land Acquisition, LLC v. Town of Mammoth Lakes (2010) 191 Cal.App.4th 435, 470 [120 Cal.Rptr.3d 797]; Wholesale Electricity Antitrust Cases I & II (2007) 147 Cal.App.4th 1293, 1309-1310 [55 Cal.Rptr.3d 253]; see also Sanchez-Corea v. Bank of America (1985) 38 Cal.3d 892, 907 [215 Cal.Rptr. 679, 701 P.2d 826] [looking to ” ‘reasonable certainty’ ” as to extent of damages for lost profits]; accord, 29 Am.Jur.3d (2016) Proof of Facts, § 259 [“In a personal injury action, an injured plaintiff is entitled to claim damages for lost earning capacity, proximately caused by the injury, where such damages are established to a reasonable degree of probability and are not speculative.“].) Although lost profits are awarded for breach of a contract while loss of earning capacity damages are awarded for a tort, both types of damages require the trier of fact to estimate the future earning capacity of a person or business; both exercises in estimation should turn on the same degree of certainty.
Third, using the reasonable probability standard for assessing a plaintiff‘s entitlement to loss of earning capacity damages while using the less onerous reasonable probability standard for assessing the extent of those damages dovetails neatly with the venerable principle that ” ‘[w]here the fact of damages is certain, the amount of damages need not be calculated with absolute certainty.’ ” (Sargon, supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 774-775, quoting GHK Associates v. Mayer Group, Inc. (1990) 224 Cal.App.3d 856, 873-874 [274 Cal.Rptr. 168]; see Small v. Fritz Companies, Inc. (2003) 30 Cal.4th 167, 191 [132 Cal.Rptr.2d 490, 65 P.3d 1255]; JMR Construction Corp. v. Environmental Assessment & Remediation Management, Inc. (2015) 243 Cal.App.4th 571, 585 [198 Cal.Rptr.3d 47]; accord, Greenfield v. Insurance Inc. (1971) 19 Cal.App.3d 803, 813 [97 Cal.Rptr. 164] [“Once certainty as to the fact of damage is established, less certainty is required as to the amount of damage“].)
Fourth, requiring the plaintiff to prove that it is reasonably probable that she could have earned the salary she now claims is foreclosed by virtue of her injury ensures that the jury‘s fixing of damages is not wholly, and thus impermissibly, speculative. (Ferguson, supra, 30 Cal.4th at p. 1048 [noting “public policy against speculative damages“]; Piscitelli v. Friedenberg (2001) 87 Cal.App.4th 953, 989 [105 Cal.Rptr.2d 88] [“it is fundamental that ‘damages which are speculative, remote, imaginary, contingent, or merely possible cannot serve as a legal basis for recovery’ “].) Use of this standard also ensures that the jurors, faced with a vacuum of evidence, do not commit misconduct by impermissibly resorting to their own extra-record knowledge in attempting to agree upon the likelihood that the plaintiff would become fit and qualified for a particular career. (E.g., People v. Holloway (1990) 50 Cal.3d 1098, 1108 [269 Cal.Rptr. 530, 790 P.2d 1327] [jurors may not rely on extra-record knowledge], overruled on other grounds in People v. Stansbury (1995) 9 Cal.4th 824, 830, fn. 1 [38 Cal.Rptr.2d 394, 889 P.2d 588].)
To be sure, a handful of cases suggest that a plaintiff‘s earning capacity is within a jury‘s common knowledge and thus may be left to the jury‘s judgment without the requirement of any evidence as to plaintiff‘s fitness for a particular career. (Girard v. Irvine (1929) 97 Cal.App. 377, 386 [275 P. 840]; Evarts v. Santa Barbara C. R. Co. (1906) 3 Cal.App. 712, 715 [86 P. 830].) Gargir also seems to suggest that enrollment in college with a special education major with the intention to attend graduate school is enough by itself to establish an earning capacity based on a career in special education. (Gargir, supra, 66 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1280-1282.) Because Girard, Evarts, and Gargir are inconsistent with the weight of later Supreme Court precedent on this point and with the standard we derive from that precedent, we respectfully disagree with those decisions.
Once the jury has determined which career options are reasonably probable for the plaintiff to achieve, how is the jury to value the earning capacity of those careers? Precedent suggests three methods: (1) by the testimony of an expert witness (e.g., Markley v. Beagle (1967) 66 Cal.2d 951, 956 [59 Cal.Rptr. 809, 429 P.2d 129]; Neumann, supra, 59 Cal.App.3d at p. 461); (2) by the testimony of lay witnesses, including the plaintiff (e.g., Storrs, supra, 134 Cal. at pp. 94-95); or (3) by proof of the plaintiff‘s prior earnings in that same career (e.g., Perry v. McLaughlin (1931) 212 Cal. 1, 12 [297 P. 554]; Bonneau, supra, 152 Cal. at pp. 413-414; Ridley v. Grifall Trucking Co. (1955) 136 Cal.App.2d 682, 688 [289 P.2d 31]; Tornell v. Munson (1947) 80 Cal.App.2d 123, 125 [181 P.2d 112]). As these options suggest, expert testimony is not always required. (E.g., Paxton, supra, 119 Cal.App.2d at p. 414; Gargir, supra, 66 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1280-1281;
Plaintiff offers three arguments in support of her position that the evidence she produced at trial—namely, her interest in a legal career and her letters of acceptance to law school—supported the jury‘s $730,000 award for lost earning capacity and that no greater showing is required.
First, she contends that a loss of earning capacity may be inferred from the nature of the injury. As explained above, a jury may infer the fact of a loss of earning capacity. (See Storrs, supra, 134 Cal. at p. 94.) But the jury may not infer the amount or extent of that loss from the injury alone.
Second, plaintiff asserts that once she shows the fact of a loss of earning capacity, the burden shifts to the defendant to set an upper limit on her earning capacity and that the upper limit is not confined to the career plaintiff has chosen to pursue. As noted above, courts have drawn a distinction between the fact of an injury to a plaintiff‘s earning capacity on the one hand, and the extent of that injury on the other. (E.g., Sargon, supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 774-775.) That distinction lessens a plaintiff‘s burden to show the extent of damages once the fact of injury has been established, but it does not shift the burden to the defendant. Further, whether the inquiry into a plaintiff‘s earning capacity encompasses all careers for which a plaintiff shows her fitness to be reasonably probable or is instead limited to the subset of those careers that plaintiff desires to pursue is a difficult question. It is also one we need not resolve today in light of plaintiff‘s failure, discussed below, to adduce evidence on her fitness for any career.
Lastly, plaintiff argues that the case law does not require a plaintiff to adduce evidence quantifying any loss of earning capacity. For support, she cites Connolly, supra, 49 Cal.2d 483, Hicks, supra, 18 Cal.2d 773, Heiner, supra, 84 Cal.App.4th 335, and Gargir, supra, 66 Cal.App.4th 1269. Connolly, Hicks, and Heiner do not support plaintiff‘s argument because in each case the plaintiff introduced evidence of what persons in the plaintiff‘s chosen career earned. (Connolly, at pp. 488-489; Hicks, at p. 784; Heiner, at pp. 346-348.) And, as we explained above, Gargir is an outlier decision we decline to follow.
B. Sufficiency of the evidence under this standard
The trial court did not err in concluding that substantial evidence did not support the jury‘s award of $285,000 in past lost earnings and $730,000 in loss of earning capacity.
With respect to the prospective loss of earning capacity, plaintiff presented sufficient evidence that she was “reasonably certain” to suffer some loss of earning capacity due to the perpetual pain, bloating and dysfunction of her digestive tract caused by the negligently performed surgery. However, she did not introduce evidence establishing a reasonable probability that she could have become qualified and fitted to earn a lawyer‘s salary. Absent from the record is any evidence of her likelihood of graduating from Suffolk Law School, her likelihood of passing the Bar, or her likelihood of obtaining a job as a lawyer. Plaintiff also adduced no evidence as to what lawyers earn.
III. Remedy
Defendants argue that the trial court‘s finding that the jury‘s award of economic damages was unsupported by the evidence obligated the court to grant their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and deny their new trial motion. Although we review the denial of a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict for substantial evidence (Sweatman, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 68) and the grant of a new trial for an abuse of discretion (Oakland Raiders v. National Football League (2007) 41 Cal.4th 624, 636 [61 Cal.Rptr.3d 634, 161 P.3d 151]), a trial court‘s selection of the appropriate remedy in this case turns on a question of statutory construction; as such, it is a question of law we review de novo. (John v. Superior Court (2016) 63 Cal.4th 91, 95-96 [201 Cal.Rptr.3d 459, 369 P.3d 238].)
A party faced with an adverse result may move for judgment notwithstanding the verdict when, among other things, the “verdict” is “not supported by the facts.” (
This general rule is grounded in two rationales. The first is judicial economy and, in particular, the recognition that a trial “is not a practice run to be scrapped in favor of a more complete proceeding in the event of an
We reject defendants’ suggestion that this general rule is without exception, and we do so for several reasons. To begin, the statute that confers upon trial courts the power to grant a new trial specifically authorizes—and thus specifically contemplates—a new trial due to “[i]nsufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict” or due to “[e]xcessive . . . damages.” (
We conclude that the trial court did not err in ruling that this case is excepted from the general rule mandating entry of judgment, and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting a new trial. Two reasons support this conclusion. First, as the trial court remarked, the jury‘s woefully inadequate award for pain and suffering damages and its wholly unsupported
IV. Evidentiary Issues on Retrial
Plaintiff raises two evidentiary issues sure to arise during the damages retrial.2 In the interest of judicial economy, we address them now.
A. Judicial notice
Plaintiff argues that the trial court is obligated as a matter of law to take judicial notice of the Bureau‘s report indicating that the median salary for lawyers in 2012 was $113,530, and that the trial court has no discretion to exclude that evidence.
A court may take judicial notice of, among other things, the “[o]fficial acts of the legislative, executive, and judicial departments of the United States . . .” and “[f]acts and propositions that are not reasonably
We conclude that the trial court is not obligated to take judicial notice of the fact that the average median salary of lawyers in 2012 was $113,530 for several reasons. This fact is not necessarily subject to judicial notice as an “[o]fficial act.” (
B. Information specific to plaintiff‘s chosen law school
Plaintiff also argues that the trial court must exclude evidence regarding the graduation rates, Bar passage rates and employment statistics of students of the Suffolk Law School. She claims that school-specific information is per se inadmissible under Hinson v. Clairemont Community Hospital (1990) 218 Cal.App.3d 1110 [267 Cal.Rptr. 503], superseded on other grounds in
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Each party is to bear its own costs.
Boren, P. J., and Chavez, J., concurred.
