LYDIA ROSENFELD, Plaintiff-Appellant, versus OCEANIA CRUISES, INC., Defendant-Appellee.
No. 10-12651
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
JUNE 7, 2012
[PUBLISH]
D. C. Docket No. 1:08-cv-22174-JLK
FILED U.S. COURT OF APPEALS ELEVENTH CIRCUIT JUNE 7, 2012 JOHN LEY CLERK
ORDER ON REHEARING EN BANC
Before DUBINA, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT, EDMONDSON, CARNES, BARKETT, HULL, MARCUS, WILSON, PRYOR and MARTIN, Circuit Judges.*
*Judge Adalberto Jordan did not participate in the en banc poll.
The court having been polled at the request of one of the members of the Court and a majority of the Circuit Judges who are in regular active service not having voted in favor of it (
/s/ Joel F. Dubina
Chief Judge
This is a personal injury case governed by maritime law. Lydia Rosenfeld slipped and fell in the dining room of an ocean liner, M/V Nautica, during a voyage from Athens to Istanbul. The floor on which she slipped was composed of ceramic tile. Rosenfeld claimed that she slipped because the floor was wet and that vessel owner Oceania Cruises, Inc.s negligence was responsible for her fall and consequent injuries. Oceania claimed that the floor was dry, that Rosenfeld fell because she was running in high heels, and that it was not liable for her injuries.
At trial, Rosenfeld proffered the deposition testimony of an expert witness, who had examined the floor where the accident happened and opined that it could be unreasonably slippery when wet, but not when dry. Presumably, Oceania objected to the introduction of the testimony; the District Court sustained the objection and barred the testimony. Because a transcript of the trial proceedings is not part of the record on appeal, we do not know the basis of Oceania s objection or the District Court s reason for excluding the testimony.
The jury found for Oceania, and Rosenfeld moved the District Court for a new trial based on the District Court s provisional pretrial—not its trial—ruling
In her opening brief to this court, Rosenfeld did the same thing. She argued that she was entitled to a new trial because the District Court s provisional pretrial ruling erroneously precluded the jury from receiving the expert s testimony. She could not argue that the District Court s trial ruling constituted reversible error because she had instructed the court reporter not to transcribe the trial proceedings. In short, her decision not to include a trial transcript as part of the record on appeal precluded this court from determining two things: (1) whether the District Court abused its discretion in excluding the proffered testimony at trial, and (2) whether, after reflecting on the evidence presented to the jury, the District Court should have granted her a new trial on the ground that its adverse pretrial evidentiary ruling affected her substantial rights.
The panel assigned to hear Rosenfeld s appeal overlooked the fact that Rosenfeld s argument for reversal was based on a provisional pretrial ruling and treated the argument as if it were addressed to the District Court s trial ruling. The panel then concluded thаt the District Court erred in excluding the proffered evidence, that the error was not harmless, and that the District Court should have granted Rosenfeld a new trial. In overlooking what Rosenfeld had done, the panel
Instead, the panel held that the District Court s ruling constituted an abuse of discretion because it prevented the jury from considering a critical piece of evidence—the expert s opinion that the floor could cause someone, like Rosenfeld, to slip and fall if the floor was wet. The abuse of discretion was so prejudicial, in the panel s view, that the District Court should have granted Rosenfeld s motion for a new trial.
Because Rosenfeld chose not to include a transcript of the trial proceedings in the record on appeal, the parties briefs contain the only evidence the panel had to draw on to determine whether the expert s testimony would have assisted the jury in deciding the case and whether the exclusion of the testimony prejudiced Rosenfeld to the extent that it affected her substantial rights, thus requiring a retrial. The briefs contain the lawyers recollectiоns of what the jury heard from the witnesses. Rosenfeld s opening brief states that while she was on her way to the bathroom, [Rosenfeld] walked on the ceramic tile and slipped and fell on a
I dissent from this court s failure to take the case en banc for three reasons.
First, a court of appeals cannot set aside a jury verdict and grant a new trial based on an error that was never raised. Rosenfeld challenges a pretrial evidentiary ruling that was provisional. Not only was it provisional as a matter of law; Rosenfeld knew that it was provisional and treated it as such, which is why she proffered the expert s testimony at trial.
Second, assuming that Rosenfeld s opening and reply briefs accurately рortrayed the evidence before the jury and the District Court s reason for rejecting Rosenfeld s trial proffer of the expert s testimony, I find that the panel altogether
Third, binding precedent and statutory law mandate that a court of appeals cannot determine whether a trial judge abused his discretion in denying an appellant s motion for a new trial without a transcript of the testimony presented to the jury and the exhibits introduced into evidence. This is so because no error is reversible unless it is so prejudicial as to affect the appellant s substantial rights. It is the appellant s burden to demonstrate such prejudice, a burden that cannot be satisfied without a record of what the jury heard. The panel relieved Rosenfeld of this burden and ordered a new trial solely on her lawyer s representations that the District Court had misapplied
This opinion is organized as follows: Part I sets out the case as the panel accepted it. I start with the pretrial proceedings—principally the District Court s denial of Oceania s motion for summary judgment and the court s provisional ruling that the expert s opinion was inadmissible—and then present Rosenfeld s slip and fall as portrayed in Rosenfeld opening brief (otherwise, the expert s opinion would be plainly inadmissible). Part I ends by explaining why the panel
I.
To understand the stage that was set for the panel, it is necessary to understand how this case arose. To do so—for reasons I explain in part II.A, infra—one must look to the parties briefs on appeal. In relevant part, here is what they say.
A.
Rosenfeld fell in one of M/V Nautica s buffet-style restaurants, the Terrace. The area where Rosenfeld slipped, which had a ceramic tile floor, was an area where patrons entering and exiting the Terrace would likely traverse. That area was alongside a service bar where wait staff—and occasionally customers—would
Rosenfeld s arguments sounded in a variety of negligence theories, but all built on three propositions: (1) the Terrace floor was in fact wet; (2) Oceania had either actual notice that the floor was wet, because Terrace staff had made it so, or constructive notice, because someone else made it wet and Oceania should have noticed the condition before Rosenfeld fell; and (3) Oceania had notice that the floor was dangerous when wet. As to this third point, Rosenfeld arranged to have the friction and slip-resistance of the Terrace s flooring tested. Rosenfeld hired Peter Vournechis, an Australian slip-resistance specialist, to analyze the floor.1
Vournechis tested the floor without knowing what was on the floor, i.e., the type of liquid and its quantity—when Rosenfled slipped. Nor did he know what may have contributed to her fall, such as gait and footwear. Nor could Vournechis testify that his test replicated the amount or type of liquid on the floor, if any, when Rosenfeld slipped. Nor did Vournechis offer an alternative flooring choice that would have been safer than the Terrace s ceramic tile. In effect, all Vournechis could establish was that the floor was slippery when wet.
After denying Oceania s motion for summary judgment, the District Court held a pretrial conference, during which it sua sponte raised the issue of whether to
After hearing from counsel, the District Court ruled Vournechis s deposition testimony inadmissible. Its ruling was, of course, provisional; the court
After the jury returned a verdict for Oceania, Rosenfeld moved the District Court for a new trial based on the provisional pretrial exclusion of Vournechis s testimony, arguing that she could not show a negligent choice of flooring surface without expert testimony saying just that. Rosenfeld presented the court with citations to pretrial deposition testimony that was not presented to the jury, namely statements Rosenfeld and her husband and Jelena Kovacevic, the Terrace restaurant waitress, made when deposed. She also cited statements made by Robin Lindsay, an Oceania executive, whose deposition was read to the jury in Rosenfeld s case in chief (according to the courtroom deputy s witness list). Rosenfeld then reiterated the argument she had made at the pretrial conference when the court was considering the admissibility of Vournechis s testimony. As part of her argument she cited the District Court s pretrial order striking her slip
The District Court denied Rosenfeld s motion for new trial. The District Court s order plainly indicates that it treated Rosenfeld as seeking a new trial on the basis of its provisional pretrial ruling. The order states:
Plaintiff moves the Court for a new trial based on the Court s Order striking Plaintiff s Slip and Fall Expert (DE #53) entered on September 10, 2009. Plaintiff s main contention is that without the testimony of her expert Peter Vournecish [sic], Plaintiff was severely prejudiced. The Court is not persuaded by Plaintiff s arguments. Accordingly, after a careful review of the record and the court being otherwise fully advised . . . Plaintiff s Motion For New Trial . . . is hereby, [denied].
Rosenfeld v. Oceania Cruises, Inc., No. 08-22174-CIV-KING, slip op. at 1 (S.D. Fla. May 7, 2010) (Order Denying Motion for New Trial) (emphasis added).
Rosenfeld then appealed to this court.6
B.
It is clear that Rosenfeld expected the District Court to grant her a new trial on the basis of an erroneous provisional pretrial evidentiary ruling. The ruling was in limine. According to Black s Law Dictionary, an in limine ruling is one that comes [o]n or at the threshold; at the very beginning; preliminarily. Black s Law Dictionary 708 (5th ed. 1979). In limine rulings to admit or exclude еvidence are always preliminary and conditioned on what the evidence shows at trial. See, e.g., Ohler v. United States, 529 U.S. 753, 758 n.3 (2000) ( [I]n limine rulings are not binding on the trial judge, and the judge may always change his mind during the course of a trial. ); Luce v. United States, 469 U.S. 38, 41–42 (1984) ( The [in limine] ruling is subject to change when the case unfolds, particularly if the actual testimony differs from what was contained in the defendant s proffer. Indeed even if nothing unexpected happens at trial, the district judge is free, in the
will be occasions in which we affirm the district court even though we would have gone the other way had it been our call. That is how an abuse of discretion standard differs from a de novo standard of review. As we have stated previously, the abuse of discretion standard allows a range of choice for the district court, so long as that choice does not constitute a clear error of judgment.
Id. at 668–69 (alterations in original) (quoting Frazier, 387 at 1259 (quoting Rasbury v. I.R.S., 24 F.3d 159, 168 (11th Cir. 1994))) (internal quotation marks omitted).
What this precedent tells us is that District Court s pretrial ruling declaring Vournechis s deposition testimony inadmissible had no legal effect. The court could revisit the ruling at trial, after Rosenfeld introduced evidence the expert s opinion addressed. If Rosenfeld wanted the jury to have the benefit of his testimony, she had to offer it into evidence. And that is what she did. Her problem is that she did not seek a new trial on the basis of the courts at-trial ruling on the proffer; rather, she based her motion on the court s pretrial ruling. It is a matter of common sense that a District Court cannоt be held to have issued an evidentiary ruling that denied the appellant a fair trial when the ruling was merely provisional, preliminary, or temporary.
The result of all of this is that Rosenfeld has waived any argument she may have had that the District Court abused its discretion when, at trial, it denied her proffer. Rosenfeld s appeal is thus a run-of-the-mine case of an abandoned issue, with no argument whatsoever for why the District Court s final evidentiary ruling at trial should now be reviewed. This court will not address a claim that has been abandoned on appeal or one that is being raised for the first time on appeal,
For the sake of argument, however, I will address this appeal as the panel apparently has. I will assume that Rosenfeld did not waive or abandon the argument that the District Court abused its discretion when, at trial, it denied her proffer, and that the final denial prejudiced her case thus affecting her substantial rights and requiring a retrial. What I will demonstrate is that the panel nevertheless erred when, in seeing the case for what Rosenfeld said it was, the panel reversed the District Court and ordered a new trial. I shall elaborate in the next part.
II.
Rosenfeld contended on appeal that she was entitled to a new triаl because (1) the District Court abused its discretion by excluding her expert witness and (2) the erroneous ruling severely prejudiced her case. Each argument, of course, ultimately concerns the District Court s application of
Therefore, I will now assess whether the District Court s evidentiary ruling was in error. If we are to assume, as the panel apparently has, that the sans-transcript record before us is sufficient to review the evidentiary ruling, then the District Court reasonably applied
A.
The record on appeal as it relates to the trial, which began on March 15 and ended on March 17, 2010, contains only a portion of what transpired at trial. It includes the courtroom deputy clerk s minute entries for each day of the trial; the
The Exhibit and Witness List indicates that Rosenfeld called all of her witnesses on the first day of the trial. She presented the testimony of four witnesses: herself; her husband; Dr. Jorge Cabrera, a physician; and Robin Lindsay, an Oceania official (via his deposition). She also introduced into evidence an Incident Report, a Corporate Statement, and a Diary.
The second day of the trial began with marking the Vournechis proffer as Court s Exhibit # 1 for identification. Oceania then presented its case on the second day, calling four witnesses to the stand; Dr. Theodore Evans, a physician; Robin Lindsay; Jelena Kovacevic; and Dr. Sami Yuksеl, the ship s physician. On the third day of trial, the jury found for Oceania.
B.
A witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education may testify in the form of an opinion or otherwise if:
- the expert s scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue;
- the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data;
- the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods; and
- the expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to the facts of the case.
sort of inquiry mandated in Daubert; and (3) the testimony assists the trier of fact, through the application of scientific, technical, or specialized expertise, to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.
Frazier, 387 F.3d at 1260 (emphasis added)(quoting City of Tuscaloosa v. Harcros Chems., Inc., 158 F.3d 548, 562 (11th Cir. 1998) (citing Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 589 (1993)))).
Although the
The District Court‘s decision admitting or excluding evidence is a discretionary call; a judge commits no reversible error unless his decision constituted an abuse of discretion. Piamba Cortes v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 177 F.3d 1272, 1305-06 (11th Cir. 1999). The Supreme Court has explicitly stated that these determinations are subject to abuse-of-discretion review, which cannot be overturned unless they are “manifestly erroneous.” Gen. Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 141-43, 118 S. Ct. 512, 517, 139 L. Ed. 2d 508 (1997) (internal quotation marks omitted).9 “A district court abuses its discretion if it applies an
The two standards may be reconciled in this scenario because the abuse-of-discretion standard espoused by this court includes review of factfinding for clear error. See Klay v. Humana, Inc., 382 F.3d 1241, 1251 (11th Cir. 2004). In short, a district court abuses its discretion if it clearly errs in making a finding of fact—including findings concerning the factual predicate for expert testimony. See id. Thus, a district court abuses its discretion if it excludes an expert based on a clearly erroneous appraisal of the facts necessary to make a Rule 702 determination, such as what is the fact at issue to which the expert‘s testimony is purportedly relevant. Such a misapprehension is an abuse of discretion because, in the words of Joiner, it is “manifestly erroneous.” 522 U.S. at 142, 118 S. Ct. at 517 (internal quotation marks omitted).
C.
The lack of a trial transcript precludes us from knowing what the District Court said at trial in rejecting Rosenfeld‘s proffer of Vournechis‘s deposition testimony. This fact alone ought to have precluded appellate review of the District Court‘s evidentiary ruling. “It is important, if not essential, to the reviewing court that an appellant under Rule 10,
D.
The panel could only assume that the District Court rejected the proffer for the reasons it stated in its pretrial order excluding Vournechis‘s testimony. Such an assumption—which the panel obviously made in rendering its opinion—does not indicate that the District Court would have abused its discretion in excluding Vournechis‘s testimony. Moreover, although the District Court‘s evidentiary ruling was in limine, preliminary, and conditioned on the evidence that would be presented at trial, see, e.g., Ohler v. United States, 529 U.S. 753, 758 n.3, 120 S. Ct. 1851, 1854 n.3, 146 L. Ed. 2d 826 (2000) (“[I]n limine rulings are not binding on the trial judge, and the judge may always change his mind during the course of a trial.“), there is no evidence in the record that would indicate the extent to which—if at all—the District Court altered that preliminary ruling. Without a transcript of what the jury heard, there is no basis here to believe that some evidence adduced at trial affected the District Court‘s preliminary evidentiary ruling—in effect, changing the exclusion of Vournechis‘s testimony from inadmissible to admissible. In this light, there is no need to assume that the District Court‘s exclusion of Vournechis‘s testimony at trial differed from its pretrial exclusion. Extrapolating from what we do know about the District Court‘s evidentiary ruling—and without cause to assume otherwise—my analysis shows that Vournechis‘s testimony was unnecessary, improper, and appropriately excluded.
In the pretrial order, the District Court stated that Rosenfeld wanted to introduce the testimony to “show that the floor, when wet, [was] unreasonably dangerous.” Rosenfeld v. Oceania Cruises, Inc., No. 08-22174-CIV-KING, slip op. at 2 (September 10, 2009) (Order Granting Motion to Preclude Expert Testimony & Denying Motion to Strike). The court found that the testimony
The District Court excluded the proffered deposition testimony of Peter Vournechis because it would not assist the jury in determining a fact in issue.12 According to her pretrial deposition testimony (which the jury did not hear),13 Rosenfeld was walking across the floor at a normal speed and gait in heels only an inch or so high, and slipped—because, unbeknownst to her, the floor was wet. Mr. Rosenfeld, on coming to his wife‘s aid, also claimed on deposition that the floor was wet. At trial, both Rosenfelds testified; one might assume, based on the record before the panel, that they both stuck to their claim that the floor was wet.
Upon close inspection, the true fact in issue in this case was whether a floor was wet. Oceania did not dispute that Mrs. Rosenfeld fell and was injured. So the fall and consequent injury were not at issue. Rather, what was disputed was the
So, the issue оf fact the jury had to decide was which witnesses were telling the truth—was the floor wet or dry? If the jurors believed the Rosenfelds, Mrs. Rosenfeld was walking at a normal gait and, unaware that the floor was wet, slipped and fell. If the jurors disbelieved Mrs. Rosenfeld, they would find against her.
The jury did not need Vournechis‘s testimony in order to determine whether or not Mrs. Rosenfeld fell. That was not in dispute. What the jury had to decide—in terms of the cause of the fall—was whether Mrs. Rosenfeld fell
This was a common-sense observation, something a typical juror would have known as a matter of everyday life experience. “The test for determining the appropriateness of expert testimony is ‘the common sense inquiry whether the untrained layman would be qualified to determine intelligently and to the best possible degree the particular issue without enlightenment from those having a specialized understanding of the subject involved in the dispute.‘” Pelster v. Ray, 987 F.2d 514, 526 (8th Cir. 1993) (quoting
The same is true in the present case: It is common sense that if a tile floor is wet and one is unaware of the wetness, one might slip—depending on soles of one‘s shoes and the gait. Ordinary experience tells us, for example, that if a tile floor is wet and a sign, “Wet Floor,” has been posted, or the wetness is apparent, and one still wants to traverse the floor, one tiptoes across the floor. Expert testimony would not help the jurors understand this concept because every juror already knows it.
Consequently, the District Court found that Vournechis‘s testimony would not assist the jury in determining a fact in issue. Oceania did not take issue with the proposition that, if the floor was wet, Mrs. Rosenfeld could have slipped. The
III.
This case does not end with an analysis of whether the District Court erred. The panel still had to determine whether that error was so grave as to warrant a new trial. Consequently, I begin that discussion with a review of what a court of appeals should do when an appellant claims that an adverse evidentiary ruling constituted an abuse of discretion and affected her substantial rights such that she should be afforded a new trial. As I will explain, the panel could not have conducted the appropriate review in this case without a trial transcript in the record on appeal. Because the panel nevertheless proceeded to grant Rоsenfeld a new trial, it erred even further.
A.
When, on appeal, an appellant seeks a new trial based on an adverse evidentiary ruling, the court of appeals decides whether a new trial should be ordered according to the dictates of
Unless justice requires otherwise, no error in admitting or excluding evidence—or any other error by the court or a party—is ground for granting a new trial, for setting aside a verdict, or for vacating, modifying, or otherwise disturbing a judgment or order. At every stage of the proceeding, the court must disregard all errors and defects that do not affect any party‘s substantial rights.
These requirements establish a critical distinction between error—which does not necessarily require reversal—and prejudicial error—which does justify a new trial. Establishing that the District Court committed error—in this case an abuse of discretiоn in excluding the expert‘s deposition testimony—is, therefore, only the first inquiry. See, e.g., Head v. Halliburton Oilwell Cementing Co., 370 F.2d 545, 546 (5th Cir. 1966) (“[T]he letter obviously should not have been
Because the appellant must affirmatively show prejudice, it is incumbent on the appellant to present this court with a record on appeal adequate to determine whether the District Court erred and, if so, whether the error was prejudicial. See, e.g., id. (“The appellants have brought up only a partial record and there is no way to determine that the argument of counsel was not supported by or responsive to the entire record.“). This court cannot analyze error for prejudice in a vacuum because what constitutes error in the abstract may be inconsequential in light of the totality of evidence before the finder of fact. See, e.g., United States v. Borden Co., 347 U.S. 514, 516, 74 S. Ct. 703, 705, 98 L. Ed. 903 (1954) (“The Government does not challenge the court‘s conclusion that on the record
Thus, in a case where the appellant presents this court with an incomplete trial record, the appellant may be unable to meet her burden of showing prejudice, i.e., that the error was not harmless. The Flores case best illustrates this principle. The issue in that products liability case was whether Cabot manufactured the defective ladder hinge assembly that killed Mr. Flores. Flores, 604 F.2d at 385. At trial, and over the objection of Mrs. Flores, the District Court informed the jury that Mrs. Flores had sued other defendants who she alleged were liable for Mr. Flores‘s death. Id. at 386. The jury found that Cabot had not manufactured the ladder hinge assembly and was thus not liable. Id. The record Mrs. Flores
Flores, therefore, reinforces the principle that an appellant who argues that the adverse jury verdict was influenced by prejudicial error is bound by the record of the trial as she presents thе argument on appeal. If the ground for reversal is the exclusion of evidence, the record the appellant presents must affirmatively show that the jury‘s verdict was influenced by the exclusion—that the exclusion affected her substantial rights. If the record is incomplete—because, for instance, it lacks a transcript of what other, more persuasive evidence the jury may have heard—the out-of-context appearance of error precludes the appellant from carrying her burden. If there is no basis for the court of appeals to determine the materiality of
B.
Turning to the case at hand, what Rosenfeld‘s motion for a new trial said to the District Court was that the District Court abused its discretion by excluding her expert and that it would be inconsistent with the interest of justice not to grant a new trial because the court‘s evidentiary ruling had affected her substantial rights. It is essential to understand what these arguments meant in light of the way the panel decided this case. Particularly, one must realize that whatever may have
1.
The District Court‘s task in assessing the merits of Rosenfeld‘s motion for a new trial was two-fold. First, the court had to determine whether the exclusion of Vournechis‘s deposition constituted an abuse of discretion, i.e., whether the District Court erred in the first place. Second, if it did, the court had to determine whether the error affected Rosenfeld‘s substantial rights. See
2.
The panel‘s task in reviewing Rosenfeld‘s arguments on appeal was the same as the District Court‘s. The relevant legal standard—specifically
C.
The problem facing the panel reviewing the District Court‘s ruling for prejudice was that it had an incomplete trial record to examine. Rosenfeld, perhaps as a matter of appellate strategy, deliberately deprived the panel of what
All Rosenfeld inсluded in the record of what took place in the jury‘s presence were (1) the District Court‘s charge on the law before the jury retired to deliberate,18 (2) a note from the jury indicating that it was deadlocked, and (3) the jury‘s verdict finding Oceania not negligent. What the panel has done in reversing the District Court‘s judgment, therefore, is to relieve Rosenfeld of the well-established obligation of showing that the exclusion of the expert‘s testimony, which she proffered in the absence of the jury, constituted harmful error—that is, the obligation of establishing that the exclusion of the expert‘s opinion evidence
D.
In the absence of a transcript of what actually took place before the jury, the panel effectively holds that a court of appeals can imagine what transpired before the jury in determining whether the exclusion of evidence affected a party‘s substantial rights. The court of appeals’ imagination in this case was informed by what took place pretrial—what witnesses said on deposition or by affidavit—and by what took place before the jury according to Rosenfeld‘s attorney‘s representations in his briefs on appeal.
Rosenfeld‘s attorney said the following in his reply brief to this court:
Oceania argues that any error was harmless. This argument is absurd because the total exclusion of Plaintiff‘s slip and fall expert in this slip and fall case destroyed Lydia Rosenfeld‘s right to a fair trial. The basis for Oceania‘s harmless error argument is equally absurd. First,
Oceania argues that the weight of the testimony at trial was that the floor was dry. This is incorrect. Oceania put on two witnesses who said that the floor was dry (Oceania employees Kovacevic and Yuskel) and Rosenfeld put on two witnesses who said the floor was wet (Lydia and Alan Rosenfeld). Second, Oceania argues that because the verdict form answered “No” to the first question posed, that means the jury “rejected Rosenfeld‘s argument that “Defendant‘s failure to maintain the area in a dry condition or failure to prevent substances from spilling on the surface and causing an unsafe condition” constituted negligence, or was the legal cause of Plaintiff‘s injuries.” This is an absurd and unfair inference. Nonetheless it actually supports Rosenfeld‘s argument. Because Rosenfeld was not allowed to put on any expert evidence regarding the condition of the subject flooring surface, there was simply no evidence for the jury to have found that the subject floor was [in] an unsаfe condition when wet.
Reply Br. at 4-5 (quoting Appellee‘s Br. at 30).21
Remarkably, the panel found reversible error based on such characterization of what transpired at trial—and thereupon authored a published opinion granting Rosenfeld a new trial. The panel essentially accepted one party‘s briefs as if they were a record of the trial. In doing so, the panel neglected the requirement that an appellant affirmatively show prejudice—which the appellant here deliberately avoided doing by replacing transcribed trial testimony with her appellate lawyer‘s
Notwithstanding Congress‘s statutory command—that a new trial cannot be ordered on the basis of an erroneous evidentiary ruling unless the record of the proceedings before the jury reveals that the error affected the appellant‘s substantial rights—the panel‘s opinion is necessarily based on the appellate briefs’ characterizations of the trial. The problem, of course, is that the panel could not have made this determination without a record of what the District Court considered in making its rulings. In sum, the panel could not have correctly reversed and remanded this case based on the record before it.
IV.
The panel‘s opinion does not announce its own error openly but does so by necessary implication. I believe it to be imperative, however, to warn against the possible misappropriation of the holding implicit in the panel‘s opinion.
A.
The form of the opinion is such that a judge or lawyer familiar with
Nevertheless, what the panel has done becomes apparent upon closer observation. The reader would start where the opinion starts, with a recitation of the facts, and assume that the facts had been established by testimony adduced at trial.
While a passenger aboard the M/V Nautica, Lydia Rosenfeld slipped and fell on a ceramic tile floor near the buffet bar of the vessel‘s Terrace Cafe. She suffered a shoulder fracture and incurred medical expenses as a result of her fall. Rosenfeld brought this diversity action against the operator of the M/V Nautica, Oceania Cruises, Inc. (“Oceania“), to recover damages for her injuries. She claimed, inter alia, that Oceania negligently caused the accident by failing to provide an adequate flooring surface for the buffet area of the Terrace Cafe.
Rosenfeld v. Oceania Cruises, Inc., 654 F.3d 1190, 1191-92 (11th Cir. 2011). Next, the reader would follow the opinion‘s track and find Rosenfeld‘s proffer of Vournechis‘s deposition testimony, which the opinion credits as crucial to the plaintiff‘s case.
To prove her case, Rosenfeld offered the expert testimony of Peter Vournechis, an Australian floor-safety specialist who performed various coefficient-of-friction tests to determine the slip resistance of the M/V Nautica‘s flooring surfaces. Vournechis found that, under wet conditions, the ceramic-tile surface surrounding the Terrace Cafe
had an inadequately low coefficient of friction. Thus, he proposed to testify at trial that the flooring surface was not reasonably safe for a self-serve or bistro area, because it posed a high risk for those passing through the Cafe to slip and fall.
Id. at 1192. The opinion‘s statement of facts and of the expert‘s proffered testimony would inform the reader that the court of appeals was doing precisely what
The opinion then concludes, in the two passages appearing below, that the District Court abused its discretion by precluding the jury from hearing what Vournechis had to say and that the error was not harmless, meaning that it affected Rosenfeld‘s substantial rights:
Because the jury was not allowed to consider evidence about whether the slip resistance of the flooring posed a danger to passengers aboard the M/V Nautica, it could not have found in Rosenfeld‘s favor with regard to hеr main negligence theory; matters of slip resistance and surface friction are “beyond the understanding and experience of the average lay citizen.” Accordingly, we conclude that the district court erred by granting Oceania‘s motion to preclude Vournechis‘s proposed testimony.
Id. at 1194 (citing United States v. Rouco, 765 F.2d 983, 995 (11th Cir. 1985)).24
[W]e cannot say that the district court‘s error was harmless. Because Rosenfeld was not allowed to admit evidence proving the inadequacy of Oceania‘s choice of flooring surface, the jury could not have found that the floor near the Terrace Cafe‘s buffet was necessarily unsafe when wet. Consequently, the jury was not able to consider whether Oceania‘s choice of ceramic-tile flooring caused Rosenfeld‘s injuries. This is particularly problematic in light of the negligence instruction given to the jury that “the plaintiff alleges that the injury was caused by Defendant‘s failure to choose an adequate flooring surface for the area where the accident occurred.”
And so, a reader of the opinion would readily conclude that the court accepted Rosenfeld‘s argument which was, in the language of
B.
Rosenfeld effectively convinced the panel that she suffered error harmful enough to overturn the jury‘s verdict—without presenting the panel a record of what the jury heard. Instead, the panel takes the case as the parties have presented it on appeal—with a record consisting only of the parties’ representations and deposition testimony that was not admitted into evidence. The panel then lumps the pretrial exclusion of Vournechis‘s testimony together with the denial of Rosenfeld‘s proffer at trial and the denial of Rosenfeld‘s motion for a new trial as equally undifferentiated “error“—each of which carries a different standard of
The panel simply could not have decided the prejudice issue on the record before it. Consider the gravity of what the panel says regarding the prejudice of the error in this case:
Because Rosenfeld was not allowed to admit evidence proving the inadequacy of Oceania‘s choice of flooring surface, the jury could not have found that the floor near the Terrace Cafe‘s buffet was necessarily unsafe when wet. Consequently, the jury was not able to consider whether Oceania‘s choice of ceramic-tile flooring caused Rosenfeld‘s injuries. This is particularly problematic in light of the negligence instruction given to the jury that “the plaintiff alleges that
the injury was caused by Defendant‘s failure to choose an adequate flooring surface for the area where the accident occurred.”
Rosenfeld, 654 F.3d at 1194 (emphasis added). The panel‘s holding means that even if the jury found that the floor was not wet, Vournechis‘s exclusion was prejudicial error. Even if the jury found that Oceania had no notice that the floor was wet, Vournechis‘s exclusion was prejudicial error.
Additionally, the substance of Vournechis‘s testimony was so plainly obvious to an ordinary person that Rosenfeld could not have been prejudiced by its exclusion. Instead, the panel‘s holding elevates an expression of plain common sense—that a wet tile floor could be slippery and, therefore, dangerous—to a level of paramount importance to Rosenfeld‘s case. The panel ought not to have done so. Indeed, the District Court‘s discretion is broader as it relates to excluding expert testimony that falls within the common experience and knowledge of jurors.
This is so because when jurors need no assistance to understand the fact at issue, the expert‘s testimony may lend undue credence to one party‘s view of the facts because that testimony bears the imprimatur of an expert. In Pelster v. Ray, 987 F.2d 514 (8th Cir. 1993), for example, a panel of the Eighth Circuit explained in an odometer-fraud case,
In this case, any lay person has the ability to compare the odometer readings on two titles, odometer statements, or check-in sheets and decide whether and when the vehicle‘s odometer had been rolled back. Thus, [an expert]‘s testimony that the odometers on 204 U.S. Wholesales cars and 96 other vehicles had been rolled back before those cars passed through South Central was not necessary to aid the jury.
. . . .
The added factor of [the expert]‘s position as a “criminal investigator” for the state further increased the danger inherent in his testimony. His testimony is analogous to a police detective testifying that several witnesses had said that a drug dealer was wearing a blue jacket at the timе he sold drugs to prove that the dealer had been so attired and that the defendant, who was arrested with a blue jacket, was guilty of distributing illegal drugs.
Id. at 526-27 (citation omitted); see also Evans v. Mathis Funeral Home, Inc., 996 F.2d 266, 268 (11th Cir. 1993) (“In barring the expert‘s testimony as to the probable effect of each of these factors in causing Evans to fall, the district court first found that the effects of the first three factors (the uneven risers and treads, the brick patio and steps, and the handrail height) were all within the common knowledge of the jurors, and thus the probative value of such testimony was outweighed by the danger of prejudice.” (citing
V.
Writing this dissenting opinion has been a very distasteful undertaking. I have written it because I am concerned about the integrity of the court as an institution. Rule 35 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure declares that an “en banc . . . rehearing is not favored and ordinarily will not be ordered unless: (1) en banc consideration is necessary to secure or maintain uniformity of the court‘s decisions; or (2) the proceeding involves a question of exceptional importance.”
A routine “slip and fall” case ordinarily does not present a question of exceptional importance. But en banc consideration of this “slip and fall” case became necessary when the panel refused to grant rehearing. Surely, maintaining
I respectfully dissent.
Notes
Trial courts must consider whether:
(1) the expert is qualified to testify competently regarding the matters he intends to address; (2) the methodology by which the expert reaches his conclusions is sufficiently reliable as determined by the
The second ground is the District Court‘s denial of Rosenfeld‘s motion for a new trial. We review the denial of a motion for a new trial similarly for abuse of discretion. Lanham v. Whitfield, 805 F.2d 970, 972 (11th Cir. 1986). The trial judge abuses his discretion if he grants a new trial when the jury‘s verdict is not “contrary to the great weight of the evidence.” Williams v. City of Valdosta, 689 F.2d 964, 973 (11th Cir. 1982).
