Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
This case involves Richard Ellis’s Jones Act claims for injuries he sustained aboard a vessel owned by Maritime Overseas Corporation. The trial court rendered judgment on the jury’s verdict for Ellis for actual and exemplary damages and awarded prejudgment interest. The court of appeals affirmed the actual damages award, but reversed the awards of exemplary damages and prejudgment interest.
Maritime asserts that the court of appeals used an improper standard to review the factual sufficiency of Ellis’s damages evidence. Maritime also contends that the court of appeals should have applied a Dau-bert-Robinson-Havner review to determine whether any well-founded scientific methodology supported some of the actual damages award.
I. BACKGROUND A. Facts
Ellis served as a steward’s assistant in the housekeeping and galley department aboard the S/T Overseas Alaska, a 700-foot oil tanker owned by Maritime. In late August 1982, while the ship was at sea, the chief steward attempted to control a roach problem by spraying Diazinon, an industrial strength pesticide, in small, enclosed, unventilated areas, including the pantry, a storeroom and other nearby areas. The chief steward did not dilute the Diazinon properly. On the morning after the spraying, crew members noticed a strong insecticide odor. The captain ordered several crew members, including Ellis, to clean up the excess Diazinon. Ellis participated in the cleanup for about five hours without wearing inhalation protective gear or special equipment to protect his skin from contact with the insecticide. He was exposed to Diazinon levels up to 200 times over what is considered safe for human exposure.
After the cleanup, Ellis complained of a headache, eye irritation, and a runny nose. The ship reached New Orleans two days later, and Ellis was sent to the New Orleans General Hospital Emergency Room. At the hospital, emergency room personnel found Ellis had myosis with pupil constriction, muscle twitching, and muscle weakness along with other symptoms. Ellis’s blood tests revealed that he had depressed levels of ace-tylcholinesterase, an essential enzyme. The
Months after his exposure to Diazinon, Ellis began to complain of memory defects, irritability, gastrointestinal problems, anxiousness, fatigue, indigestion, nausea, muscle pain and stiffness, leg cramps, dizziness, insomnia, high blood pressure, and black-out spells. At trial, Ellis’s experts testified that his Diazinon exposure had caused him to suffer from “delayed neurotoxicity” or “neu-ropathy.” Ellis’s experts also testified that his condition is irreversible.
B. Procedural History
About ten months after his exposure to Diazinon, Ellis sued Maritimé for gross negligence under the Jones Act and unseaworthiness under general maritime law. Based on the jury’s verdict, the trial court rendered judgment for Ellis for $8,576,000 in actual damages, $1,000,000 in punitive damages, $1,000,000 in exemplary damages for failure to pay maintenance and cure, and $1,871,728 in prejudgment interest. The damages totaled about $12.6 million. Maritime filed post-verdict motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and new trial or, in the alternative, for remittitur. Maritime alleged that the actual and exemplary damages were excessive because the evidence was factually insufficient to support the damage awards. The trial court overruled all of Maritime’s motions.
In the court of appeals, Maritime only complained about the trial court’s denial of its motion for new trial and motion for remit-titur; it did not challenge the trial court’s denial of its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The case was first argued before a three-judge panel of the court of appeals. The panel majority held that the evidence was factually insufficient to support the damages award. There was a dissent without an opinion. Later, the court of appeals granted Ellis’s motion for en banc rehearing. Following argument, the en banc court affirmed the actual damages award, but reversed the trial court’s judgment for exemplary damages and prejudgment interest.
This Court granted Maritime’s application for writ of error on two issues. First, Maritime contends that the court of appeals erred by not using the proper standard to review the factual sufficiency of Ellis’s actual damages evidence. Maritime argues that the court of appeals should have applied a traditional factual sufficiency review to the damages award instead of a featherweight causation standard because the trial court submitted the damages question to the jury based upon a preponderance of the evidence burden of proof. Second, Maritime contends, within the framework of its factual sufficiency review argument, that the court of appeals should have examined whether any well-founded scientific methodology supported the jury’s actual damages award.
At oral argument in this Court, Maritime stated that it was not making a no evidence complaint. Rather, Maritime asserted that its only complaint is that the court of appeals did not properly conduct a factual sufficiency review. However, under its factual sufficiency argument, Maritime argues that there is no evidence of long term injury from delayed neurotoxicity. In essence, Maritime would have this Court conduct a no evidence review of the evidence about delayed neurotoxicity within the Court’s review of whether the court of appeals properly reviewed the factual sufficiency of the evidence. We decline to do so.
II. COURT OF APPEALS’ FACTUAL SUFFICIENCY REVIEW
A. The Jones Act 46 U.S.C. § 688
The Jones Act provides a cause of action for maritime workers injured by an employer’s negligence. Federal law provides
Under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), a related statute, the causation burden is not the common law proximate cause standard. Rather, the causation burden is “whether the proof justifies with reason the conclusion that employer negligence played any part, even the slightest, in producing the injury for which the claimant seeks damages.” Rogers v. Missouri Pac. R.R.,
B. Standards of Review
1. Jones Act Liability
Texas courts have long recognized that in addition to the burden of proof being less stringent, the standard of appellate review in a Jones Act case is also less stringent than under the common law. See Texas & Pac. Ry. v. Roberts,
2. Excessive Damages and Remittiturs
Texas courts of appeal have the power to review excessiveness of damages and to order remittitur in FELA actions and, by implication, in Jones Act cases as well. See Sweet v. Port Terminal R.R.,
The standard of review for an excessive damages complaint is factual sufficiency of the evidence. See Rose v. Doctors Hosp.,
If the court of appeals determines that the evidence supports the jury’s verdict, it is not required to detail all the evidence supporting the judgment when it affirms the trial court’s judgment for actual damages. See Ellis County State Bank v. Keener,
Because the question of whether damages are excessive and that a remittitur is appropriate is a factual determination made final in the court of appeals, this Court lacks jurisdiction to review such findings. Tex. Const, art. V, § 6; Tex. Gov’t Code, § 22.225(a); Akin v. Dahl,
C. Analysis
Maritime concedes that the Jones Act imposes a reduced burden in proving a defendant’s liability, but asserts the Act does not reheve a plaintiff of the burden of proving damages by a preponderance of the evidence. Initially, Maritime contends that by submitting the damages question based upon a' preponderance of the evidence, Ellis waived any argument that a featherweight standard applies to the court of appeals’ review of damages. See De La Lastra,
The record shows that during trial, Ellis offered the testimony of five expert medical doctors, four of whom had examined and treated Ellis. Maritime did not challenge the testimony of any of the five experts at trial. All five expert witnesses testified that Ellis’s severe and lengthy exposure to Diazi-non caused his prolonged neural damages. They expressed their opinions on bases ranging from reasonable medical probability to without a doubt. In essence, all five experts testified that Ellis’s prolonged exposure to excessive levels of Diazinon due to Maritime’s negligence caused the long-term effects of delayed neurotoxicity. Maritime presented three medical doctor experts, only one of whom had treated Ellis. These three experts testified that Ellis’s injuries were not a delayed effect of his Diazinon exposure.
The jury answered “yes” to the question of whether Maritime’s negligence played any part, even the slightest, in producing injury or illness to Ellis. The jury then found, based on a preponderance of the evidence, that $8,576,000 in actual damages would fairly and reasonably compensate Ellis for the injuries or illnesses resulting from the occurrence in question. The trial court rendered judgment for Ellis on the jury’s verdict for the actual damages together with exemplary and punitive damages and prejudgment interest.
Appellant concedes that appellee suffered short-term effects from the exposure to Diazinon and in effect, that overexposure to Diazinon is toxic to humans and can cause damage to the nervous system on some temporary basis. Thus, appellant does not contest damages for the medical treatment appellee received in New Orleans in 1982 or for the loss of two days of work. Appellant does contest damages awarded for appellee’s claim of delayed and permanent neurotoxic damage on the ground that appellee’s expert testimony was speculative and not based on reasonable medical probability. Essentially, appellant’s attack is directed at the issue of causation as to the delayed and permanent damage found by the jury based on the circumstantial and expert evidence before them.
The court of appeals detailed the material testimony of all eight experts — five for Ellis and three for Maritime. After doing so, the court of appeals first concluded that the evidence more than satisfied the Jones Act standard for causation.
III. COURT OF APPEALS’ REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE
Maritime’s second contention is that the court of appeals erred because it did not examine whether any well-founded scientific evidence supports the actual damages award. Maritime argues that the federal standard articulated in Daubert and the state standard articulated in Robinson and Hamer are the proper standards for reviewing the sufficiency of Ellis’s damages evidence. Significantly, Maritime does not complain about the trial court’s admission of any of the scientific evidence from any of Ellis’s five experts. Rather, Maritime’s position is that if the court of appeals applied a proper scientific methodology test to Ellis’s experts’ testimony, the testimony would be legally insufficient to show that the long term conditions Ellis claims he suffers were caused by delayed neurotoxicity. Thus, Maritime concludes, by way of its complaints about the court of appeals’ factual sufficiency review, that there is no evidence of some of Ellis’s actual damages. Maritime’s argument is flawed.
A. Daubert-Robinson-HavNer
In Daubert, the Supreme Court considered “the standard for admitting expert scientific testimony-in a federal trial.” Daubert, 509
Similarly, in Robinson, we granted DuPont’s application for writ of error to decide “the appropriate standard for the admission of scientific expert testimony.” See Robinson,
Under Havner, a party may complain on appeal that scientific evidence is unreliable and thus, no evidence to support a judgment. See Havner,
B. ERROR PRESERVATION
To preserve a complaint that scientific evidence is unreliable and thus, no evidence, a party must object to the evidence before trial or when the evidence is offered. See Robinson,
Reviewing courts may not exclude expert scientific evidence after trial to render a judgment against the offering party because that party relied on the fact that the evidence was admitted. Babbitt,
[Permitting [a party] to challenge on appeal the reliability of [the opposing party’s] scientific evidence under Daubert, in the guise of an insuffieieney-of-the-evidence argument, would give [appellant] an unfair advantage. [Appellant] would be ‘free to gamble on a favorable judgment before the trial court, knowing that [it could] seek reversal on appeal [despite its] failure to [object at trial].’
Babbitt,
C. Analysis
In this case, Maritime did not object to the reliability of Ellis’s scientific evidence until after the jury verdict. Maritime nevertheless argues that the court of appeals should have applied the Daubert-Robinson-Hav-ner
Daubert and Havner involve the anti-nausea drug, Bendectin. In these two cases, plaintiffs asserted that Bendectin caused birth defects. See Daubert,
In Daubert, Merrell Dow moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted summary judgment on the grounds that the Dauberts did not establish that the principle on which their experts based their opinions was generally accepted by the relevant scientific community. See Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
In Robinson, the trial court granted DuPont’s pretrial motion and excluded the Rob-insons’ expert testimony on the ground that it was neither relevant nor based upon a reliable foundation. See Robinson,
In Havner, Merrell Dow objected to the Havners’ scientific evidence “at several junctures” during the litigation. See Havner,
Here, Maritime did not object to the scientific reliability of a single one of Ellis’s five expert witnesses until after the jury verdict. Before trial, Maritime did not ask for a Daubert/Robinson-type hearing. Cf. Havner,
Rules and procedures about error preservation promote certainty and fairness. Such rules also frame and develop the legal issues for appeal, giving notice to both the litigants and to appellate courts about what issues remain. Appellate courts must base their decisions on the record as made and brought forward, not on a record that should have been made or could have been made. See Babbitt,
IV. RESPONSE TO THE DISSENT
We do not disagree with the dissent that “Maritime Overseas’ position has always been ... that no rehable scientific evidence shows that Diazinon can cause long-term neurotoxicity.”
Nevertheless, the dissent would hold that Maritime’s decision to argue the weight of both parties’ experts’ testimony to the jury was sufficient to preserve a complaint about reliability for appeal. When the reliability of scientific evidence is contested, attempts at persuasion before the jury and reiterated on appeal cannot amount to preservation of error for appeal. To allow otherwise would impermissibly permit a party to strip away the trial court’s role as gatekeeper in the first instance when a party wishes to contest the reliability of scientific evidence. See
Under the dissent’s approach, the trial court would be converted at a party’s whim from a gatekeeper to “an idle spectator rendered powerless to ensure the integrity of courtroom evidence.” Robinson,
The dissent also goes to great lengths to set forth eases that it claims stand for the proposition that “a party may complain after verdict and on appeal that evidence admitted without objection is neither legally nor factually sufficient to support the verdict.”
Maritime could have and should have objected to Ellis’s evidence at trial in a timely fashion for appellate consideration. We have properly decided the case on the issues preserved at trial and raised on appeal, as our rules and precedent require.
V. CONCLUSION
We conclude that the court of appeals used the proper standard to review the factual sufficiency of Ellis’s actual damages evidence. We also conclude that because Maritime did not preserve error about Ellis’s scientific expert testimony in the trial court, the court of appeals did not err in conducting its factual sufficiency review. We overrule Maritime’s other points of error. Accordingly, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment.
Notes
. See Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
. Maritime also cites Brock v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
Concurrence Opinion
joined by ABBOTT, Justice, with respect to Part III, concurring.
I concur with the Court’s judgment. The Court correctly resolves the main issues: (1) approving the court of appeals’ standard for reviewing the factual insufficiency of the evidence of a Jones Act cause of action, and (2) rejecting Maritime Overseas Company’s untimely attempt to challenge the reliability of scientific evidence. See E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Robinson,
I
In Robinson, we made trial courts the gatekeepers of scientific evidence, charging them with the duty to screen out the speculative and unreliable. See id. at 556-57. It is impossible for a court to exercise its gatekeeper function after the evidence has been
We sustained a no-evidence point without discussing error preservation in Burroughs Wellcome Co. v. Crye,
The Court resolves the question in this case by characterizing Maritime’s Robinson argument as a no-evidence complaint, and then holding that Maritime failed to preserve a legal insufficiency point. The dissenting opinion also treats Maritime’s arguments as legal insufficiency points. I think their respective analyses are wrong for two reasons. First, Maritime’s arguments here are not true no-evidence points. As the Court observes, Maritime expressly disavows any legal insufficiency complaint, and instead claims only to challenge the court of appeals’ standard of review when it evaluated factual insufficiency. Maritime’s prayer for relief seeks only a new trial. I would take Maritime’s arguments at face value and not try to read a no-evidence point into them.
Maritime argues instead that the evidence of causation is factually insufficient because the record is utterly devoid of reliable scientific evidence of causation. Such an argument would be a legitimate factual insufficiency argument if made to a court of appeals. A court of appeals reviewing factual insufficiency considers all of the evidence to see if “the evidence supporting the finding is so weak or the evidence to the contrary is so overwhelming that the finding should be set aside and a new trial ordered.” Garza v. Alviar,
However, an argument proper in the court of appeals may not be appropriate in our Court because of our limited jurisdiction over factual insufficiency. Our jurisdiction over factual insufficiency is limited to whether the court of appeals applied the proper standard of review. See In re King’s Estate,
II
Moreover, whether we categorize Maritime’s arguments as factual insufficiency or legal insufficiency does not resolve the case for me. I do not think the usual rules for preserving either factual or legal insufficiency complaints adequately address the concerns unique to Robinson issues.
Ordinarily, both legal and factual insufficiency points may be preserved by post-judgment motions. See Cecil v. Smith,
[W]e emphasize that courts must make a determination of reliability from all the evidence. Courts should allow a party, plaintiff or defendant, to present the best available evidence, assuming it passes muster under Robinson, and only then should a court determine from a totality of the evidence, considering all factors affecting the reliability of particular studies, whether there is legally sufficient evidence to support a judgment.
Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc. v. Havner,
It should be apparent that appellate courts constitutionally cannot conduct such a hearing in the first instance. However, I do not think that allowing parties to raise Robinson objections for the first time post verdict, or even during trial, is fair to the litigants or judicially efficient.
A court should not be required to interrupt trial to conduct a Robinson hearing which could have been held pretrial. As Merrell Dow v. Havner illustrates, the trial court’s role as gatekeeper requires it to decide complex issues in fields outside its primary expertise. Some courts have tried innovative approaches, such as selecting neutral experts in the field to serve as masters, a step I encourage when the issues are especially complex. See Justice Breyer Calls for Experts to Aid Courts in Complex Cases, N.Y. Times, Feb. 17,1998, at A17. Such innovation is not possible if the trial court is not given advance warning.
I recognize that there may be instances of good cause for not making a Robinson objection pretrial, in which case the trial court should entertain the objection. Also, some opinion testimony may be so untenable on its face that no Robinson hearing is necessary. For example, our Court recognized long before Robinson that courts are not bound by testimony at odds with indisputable physical facts and common knowledge because it has no probative value. Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Martin,
Ill
As a final note, I encourage trial courts to aggressively exercise their role as gatekeepers of scientific evidence. There are many steps a court could take to try cases efficiently and fairly, with fidelity to sound scientific methodology. For example, a court could:
1) require parties to notify opponents and the court sufficiently in advance of the trial of plans to either offer scientific evidence or challenge an opponent’s evidence;
2) conduct a preliminary hearing on admissibility in advance of plans to offer the evidence;
*415 3) in complex litigation, appoint a panel of specially trained scientists or a special master to hear evidence and report on complicated scientific and statistical matters. The report would be filed with the clerk’s office. If the parties request it, the court should conduct a hearing on the report and allow the parties to cross examine the court experts (the expert’s fees would be taxed as court costs);
4) render expert testimony inadmissible or rule objections waived unless the parties fully comply with the notice requirements set out above.
In sum, because a Robinson objection profoundly impacts the trial of a case, an opponent to proffered scientific evidence should raise the issue of reliability early in the litigation or risk losing the objection. I agree with the Court that an opponent to scientific evidence must object to it when offered, at the very latest. However, I would go further and hold that if a party knows pretrial about the existence of Robinson issues but fails to ask for a pretrial hearing, any objection about the admission or exclusion of such evidence raised for the first time during trial is waived.
Dissenting Opinion
joined by PHILLIPS, Chief Justice, dissenting.
Maritime Overseas Corporation seeks a new trial because, while Richard Ellis was undeniably injured by his exposure to diazi-non, the scientific evidence does not support the conclusion that he suffers from permanent neurotoxicity, and thus the $8,576,000 awarded him in damages is excessive. The Court holds that it could not order a new trial even if it agreed with Maritime Overseas’ contention, completely ignoring its decision to grant a new trial in indistinguishable circumstances just one year ago in Texar-kana Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Murdock,
Not one case the Court cites so much as hints that a party in Maritime Overseas’ circumstances has failed to preserve error, and one of those eases, Sumitomo Bank v. Product Promotions, Inc.,
I
It is undisputed that Ellis suffered some injury from his exposure to diazinon and should recover some damages, but it is equally undisputed that if he did not suffer long-term neurotoxicity, his damages are nowhere near $8,576,000. The court of appeals, in determining the factual sufficiency of the evidence, considered expert testimony that Ellis not only was injured but that he suffers from neurotoxicity. Maritime Overseas argues that evidence offered in support of Ellis’s long-term injury claims is unreliable and therefore no evidence at all. Thus, Maritime Overseas contends that the court of appeals erred in considering such testimony in its factual sufficiency review. The Court correctly summarizes Maritime Overseas’ argument: “In essence, Maritime would have this Court conduct a no evidence review of the evidence about delayed neurotoxicity within the Court’s review of whether the court of
But the Court did not “decline to do so” last year in Texarkana Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Murdock,
[W]hile [there] is some evidence of damage caused by [the Hospital’s] negligence, a plaintiff may recover only for those injuries caused by the event made the basis of suit. Morgan v. Compugraphic Corp.,675 S.W.2d 729 , 782 (Tex.1984). The case before us is analogous to other cases where a suit for medical expenses involved another injury or pre-existing condition- We ... hold that a plaintiff should recover only for medical expenses specifically shown to result from treatment made necessary by the negligent acts or omissions of the defendant, where such a differentiation is possible.
Id. at 839-840 (citation omitted). Although the Hospital couched its complaint in no-evidence terms, for which the remedy is ordinarily rendition of judgment, we concluded that “[b]ecause Murdock ... presented legally sufficient evidence that some of the medical expenses resulted from [the Hospital’s negligence], [she] should be afforded an opportunity to develop this evidence further.” Id. at 841. Thus, we remanded the case for a new trial. In support of this conclusion we cited Stewart Title Guaranty Co. v. Sterling,
The present case is indistinguishable from Murdock. There, as here, the argument was that while some evidence showed some damages, no evidence supported all the damages awarded. Although the Hospital complained of the legal sufficiency of the evidence, it in effect challenged the court of appeals’ factual sufficiency review for considering non-probative evidence, and we treated the complaint as being directed to that review, remanding for a new trial rather than rendering judgment for the Hospital. Maritime Overseas’ application for writ of error states: “There is no evidence that diazinon causes delayed neurotoxicity and thus insufficient evidence that Ellis suffered $8,576,000 in actual damages.” The arguments in the two cases, while phrased differently, are indistinguishable in import and effect. The arguments and the relief sought are the same in both.
Why isn’t Murdock controlling or at least instructive? The Court refuses to answer, refuses even to cite Murdock. The argument that there is some significance in the Hospital’s no-evidence challenge and Maritime Overseas’ insufficient-evidence challenge is too weak even for the Court to employ. If anything, Maritime Overseas’ contention that the evidence of damages is insufficient because there is no evidence of some damages awarded is more straightforward than the Hospital’s contention that there was no evidence of the damages awarded because there was some evidence of only lesser damages. But in fact, both arguments come out at the same place, in substance— some but not all of the damages are supported by the evidence — and in result — a new trial excluding the unsupported claims.
A point of error “is sufficient if it directs the attention of the appellate court to the error about which complaint is made.” Courts.are to construe rules on briefing liberally. An appellate court should consider the parties’ arguments supporting each point of error and not merely the wording of the points.
Anderson v. Gilbert,
In this case, Ellis offered no epidemiological study, no peer-reviewed theory, nor any evidence of general scientific acceptance to support the conclusion of his experts that his exposure to diazinon caused delayed neurotoxicity. The premise upon which his experts’ conclusion was based— that because some organophosphates can cause delayed neurotoxicity, diazinon therefore must cause delayed neurotoxicity — is false logic, as pointed out by Justice Robertson’s concurring and dissenting opinion, because some organophosphates do not cause delayed neurotoxicity.
To make the matter even clearer, Maritime Overseas summarizes its position thusly: “There is no evidence that diazinon causes delayed neurotoxicity and thus insufficient evidence that Ellis suffered $8,576,000 in actual damages.”
The result in Murdock was correct, and the same analysis should be applied in this case. A party must have a means of contesting the amount of damages when there is evidence for some claims but not all of them. Following Murdock, Maritime Overseas is entitled to a new trial if its evidentiary complaint has been preserved and has merit. The Court holds that Maritime Overseas’ complaint was not preserved and does not reach the merits.
II
As early as 1912, and as recently as last year, this Court has held that a party may complain after verdict and on appeal that evidence admitted without objection is neither legally nor factually sufficient to support the verdict. The Court ignores a solid line of cases establishing this principle with respect to all kinds of evidence, including scientific testimony. There is no authority for the Court’s holding that “[t]o preserve a complaint that scientific evidence is unreliable and thus, no evidence, a party must object to the evidence before trial or when the evidence is offered.” Ante at 409. The notion that a party must as a matter of course object to evidence before trial is a complete stranger to our procedure. Despite this lack of authority, it seems clear that parties should be required to contest the reliability of scientific testimony in some way prior to the verdict in most instances. However, Maritime Overseas did so in this case.
A
As a rule, a contention that evidence is insufficient to support a judgment need not be raised before the verdict. Rule 279, Tex.R. Civ. P., states: “A claim that the evidence was legally or factually insufficient to warrant the submission of any question may be made for the first time after verdict, regardless of whether the submission of such question was requested by the complainant.” Prior to the verdict, a party may, but is not required to, raise the complete absence of evidence on a point. This differs from federal procedure, which requires that a motion for judgment as a matter of law be made before the ease is submitted to the jury “to assure the responding party an opportunity to cure any deficiency in that party’s proof that may have been overlooked until called to the party’s attention”. Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a)(2) advisory committee’s note. Texas procedure does not afford parties the same protection. Thus, for example, a defendant sued for reasonable and necessary expenses can wait until after the verdict to point out that the plaintiff never offered evidence that the expenses claimed were reasonable. See McCreless Properties, Ltd. v. F.W. Wool
Even if evidence is admitted without objection, it may be insufficient to support a judgment. This Court held eighty-six years ago that “incompetent testimony can never form the basis of a finding of facts in an appellate court, notwithstanding its presence in the record without objection.” Henry v. Phillips,
In Casualty Underwriters v. Rhone,
The only testimony in the record which would in the least tend to support the conclusion that Rhone was working for the Beaumont Development Corporation was given by Rhone and McDaniel, each of whom testified that, at the time of the injury, Rhone was working for it. Those statements did not amount to any evidence at all. They were but bare conclusions and therefore incompetent, and the fact that they were admitted without objection adds nothing to their probative force.
Id. at 99.
The Court followed Rhone in Dallas Railway & Terminal Company v. Gossett,
Two eases cited by Gossett with approval apply the same principle in other settings. In one, Webb v. Reynolds,
In Robertson Tank Lines, Inc. v. Van Cleave,
This court has approved the holding that testimony of an employee (driver) that he was acting within the course of his employment at the time of an accident is not admissible. If such testimony is admitted, with or without objection, it has been held to be incompetent and without probative force. It will not support a verdict or a finding of fact by a court.
Id. at 360 (citations omitted).
In Schaefer v. Texas Employers’ Insurance Association,
The basis for [Dr. Anderson’s] opimon is that persons engaged in “dirty” occupations, such as farmers, tend to have a greater exposure to the bacteria; that Schaefer frequently worked in soil contaminated by bird droppings; that Schaefer suffers from one of the serotypes of m. intracellularis; and, therefore, he has an occupational disease. Notwithstanding Dr. Anderson’s opinion, there is a crucial deficiency in the proof of causation. The evidence fails to establish that any bacteria was present in the soil where Schaefer worked.
Id. at 203. After quoting extensively from Dr. Anderson’s testimony, the Court continued that his opimon was no evidence of the cause of Schaefer’s disease because it lacked any real basis:
Dr. Anderson assumes that Schaefer is infected with an avian serotype m. intracel-lularis pathogenic to fowl. He further assumes that this serotype was present in bird droppings where Schaefer worked. It is admitted that the particular strain of m. intracellularis from which Bobby Schaefer suffers has not been identified. It is also admitted that the manner in which the disease was transmitted to Schaefer is unknown. It is further admitted that there is no evidence that the bacteria is present in the soil where Schaefer worked, or even in Nueces County.
We have reviewed the substance of Dr. Anderson’s testimony in its entirety and we find that it does no more than suggest a possibility as to how or when Schaefer was exposed to or contracted the disease. We hold that his opimon is not based upon reasonable medical probability but relies on mere possibility, speculation, and surmise. We hold there is no evidence that the disease suffered by Bobby Schaefer is an occupational disease “arising out of and in the course of employment.” The fact that proof of causation is difficult does not provide a plaintiff with an excuse to avoid introducing some evidence of causation. To ignore the substance of Dr. Anderson’s testimony and accept his opinion as “some” evidence simply because he used the magic words “reasonable probability” effectively*420 removes this Court’s jurisdiction over any ease requiring expert opinion testimony. Under such view, so long as an expert states the words “reasonable probability,” in giving his opinion, there would be some evidence. The question would then be solely one of sufficiency of the evidence over which this Court has no jurisdiction.
Id. at 204-205 (citations omitted).
We reaffirmed Schaefer in Burroughs Wellcome Company v. Crye,
We hold that Dr. Blesius’ testimony constitutes no evidence that Polysporin spray caused Crye to sustain a frostbite injury. When an expert’s opinion is based on assumed facts that vary materially from the actual, undisputed facts, the opinion is without probative value and cannot support a verdict or judgment. See Schaefer v. Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n.,612 S.W.2d 199 , 202-05 (Tex.1980) (reviewing substance of medical expert’s testimony and holding that this testimony constitutes no evidence of causation, as it is based on assumptions, possibility, speculation, and surmise).
,Id. at 499-500 (citation omitted).
Just last year in Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Havner,
Justice Gonzalez, in writing for the Court, gave rather colorful examples of unreliable scientific evidence in E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Robinson,923 S.W.2d 549 , 558 (Tex.1995), when he said that even an expert with a degree should not be able to testify that the world is flat, that the moon is made of green cheese, or that the Earth is the center of the solar system. If for some reason such testimony were admitted in a trial without objection, would a reviewing court be obliged to accept it as some evidence? The answer is no. In concluding that this testimony is scientifically unreliable and therefore no evidence, however, a court necessarily looks beyond what the expert said. Reliability is determined by looking at numerous factors including those set forth in Robinson and [Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,509 U.S. 579 ,113 S.Ct. 2786 ,125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993) ]. The testimony of an expert is generally opinion testimony. Whether it rises to the level of evidence is determined under our rules of evidence, including Rule 702, which requires courts to determine if the opinion testimony will assist the jury in deciding a fact issue. While Rule 702 deals with the admissibility of evidence, it offers substantive guidelines in determining if the expert testimony is some evidence of probative value.
Id. (emphasis in original).
Within the past few months we denied the application for writ of error in Williams v. Gaines,
To summarize, bare conclusions and assertions unsupported by facts of record, expert opinions based on facts merely assumed and not proved, or facts different from those proved, and scientific testimony without any reliable basis, even if admitted without objection, are no evidence to support a finding of fact. An expert’s opinion that disease was contracted through working conditions, or that a spray caused frostbite, or that a medication caused birth defects, even if admitted without objection, is not probative evidence if the testimony shows that the opinion lacks any substantial basis. This is not to say that the deficiency in the evidence need not be pointed out in any way before the verdict, but only that it can be done by cross-examination and means other than objections.
B
The Court holds: “To preserve a complaint that scientific evidence is unreliable and thus, no evidence, a party must object to the evidence before trial or when the evidence is offered.” Ante at 409. Whatever the Court means by objecting to evidence before trial, the four cases the Court cites as authority do not support this holding. The first case, Robinson, does not consider the issue. In that ease, the subject evidence was objected to and excluded by the trial court. Whether any objection was necessary was never addressed by this Court. In the second case, H aimer, we stated quite plainly that objection was made to the admission of “some, but not all” of the evidence at issue. “[T]he question of scientific reliability was raised repeatedly”, but not consistently by objection. Havner,
The other two cases, Marbled Murrelet v. Babbitt,
The trial judge erred in retroactively striking the summary exhibits and then gauging the jury’s performance on the fictive basis that the summary evidence was not before it. Although acceptable in the context of a motion for new trial, see*422 Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Duncan,311 U.S. 243 ,61 S.Ct. 189 ,86 L.Ed. 147 (1940), this methodology is not appropriate in connection with a motion for judgment n.o.v.
Each motion, as the rule recognizes, has its own office. The motion for judgment cannot be granted unless, as matter of law, the opponent of the movant failed to make a case and, therefore, a verdict in movant’s favor should have been directed. The motion for a new trial may invoke the discretion of the court in so far as it is bottomed on the claim that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, that the damages are excessive, or that, for other reasons, the trial was not fair to the party moving; and may raise questions of law arising out of alleged substantial errors in admission or rejection of evidence• or instructions to the jury.
Maritime Overseas contends here that it is entitled to a -new trial, not that judgment should be rendered in its favor. Thus, the Court’s reasoning, and the cases it cites, are inapposite. Our rules of procedure do not require a party to assert before the verdict that the evidence is insufficient to support a verdict. The factual sufficiency of the evidence may always be attacked post-verdict, even if no objection was made to its admissibility. Indeed, as the Supreme Court observed, one consideration in deciding whether to grant a new trial is whether there were substantial errors in the admission or rejection of evidence. As already demonstrated, our own precedents permit evidence to be rejected post-verdict as non-probative in at least some instances, even if it was admitted without objection.
C
The Court holds that the reliability of scientific evidence must be objected to before trial or when the evidence is offered. How one objects to evidence before trial is not entirely clear. The Court mentions Merrell Dow’s motion for summary judgment and motion in limine in Havner, suggesting that these are ways in which scientific evidence can be challenged. As already noted, the Court states that “Merrell Dow objected to the admission of the Havners’ scientific evidence”, ante at 411, but this is only partly true. Merrell Dow only objected to some of the Havners’ evidence. Had Merrell Dow been foreclosed from attacking the reliability of evidence to which it did not object, there would have been evidence to support the verdict. Thus, the Court’s holding that no evidence supported the verdict was despite the absence of objections.
The Court states that Havner “emphasized that the offering party should be allowed the opportunity to ‘pass[] muster’ under a trial court Robinson challenge — ‘to present the best evidence available’ — before an appellate court considers whether legally sufficient evidence supports a judgment.” Ante at 411. What Havner actually said was:
In sum, we emphasize that courts must make a determination of reliability from all the evidence. Courts should allow a party, plaintiff or defendant, to present the best available evidence, assuming it passes muster under Robinson, and only then should a court determine from a totality of the evidence, considering all factors affecting the reliability of particular studies, whether there is legally sufficient evidence to support a judgment..
The Court does not explain the holding in Schaefer and other cases cited above, where evidence was held to be non-probative even though it had been admitted without objection. Instead, the Court refers vaguely to a pretrial “Daubert/Robinson-tjpe hearing.” Ante at 411. The Court does not explain what kind of hearing this is, how it is in
Our precedents seem to teach that parties should not be permitted to attack evidence for the first time after the verdict unless it is plainly without probative value — such as an opinion based on the moon’s being made of green cheese, or a mere assertion that a person is another’s employee, or that a person was injured in the course of work, or that a person made an agreement. In most situations, however, if the probative value of evidence is to be in question, then ordinarily the issue must be raised before the verdict. This prevents the ambush that concerns the Court and puts both parties and the trial court on notice of the contentions in the case. But it hardly makes sense to require a specific objection to each line of scientific opinion testimony when a party’s stated, clear position is that the opinion is baseless. In Schaefer, for example, the carrier’s position was plain from its cross-examination of the claimant’s physician: his opinion that the claimant contracted atypical tuberculosis at work had no basis in fact. Likewise, in Havner, there could be no mistake that Merrell Dow’s position throughout, as in all the other Bendectin cases previously tried, was that there was no reliable evidence that Bendectin caused birth defects.
In the case before us, there was never any doubt about Maritime Overseas’ position. In his opening statement, Ellis’s attorney told the jury:
The attorney representing the company told you yesterday that — well, their position is that this chemical just cannot cause an injury to a worker’s nervous system. That’s just not true. In fact, you’ll hear evidence from the witnesses that it can cause an injury if it is — if the exposure is sufficiently great and if the exposure is on the order of what this man was exposed to.
Maritime Overseas’ counsel responded in his opening statement:
[W]e think the medical evidence will show that the effects of diazinon are not long-term but, indeed, are confined within a specific period of time. Certainly no more than months.
And the evidence will show, and well bring in a toxicologist and a neuropsyehol-ogist who will testify that there is no relationship between the current situation exhibited by Mr. Ellis in the exposure to diazinon on the ship in 1982.
The dispute over this issue pervaded the examination and cross-examination of the eight expert witnesses. The focus of all the testimony was not on Ellis’s initial poisoning from his exposure to diazinon, but whether he suffered any long-term injury. The possibility that diazinon causes neurotoxicity was thoroughly explored, and Maritime Overseas established that no studies or other evidence exist to support the opinions of Ellis’s experts that he suffered from neurotoxicity caused by exposure to diazinon.
In summation, Ellis’s counsel again addressed the issue:
I acknowledge that the difficulty I have labored under is that you cannot show clearly a damage to the central nervous system. Nobody can, but that doesn’t mean you don’t have a right to be treated fairly when you have it.
Maritime Overseas’ counsel stressed in summation:
There wasn’t a single article out of all the articles that we all went over bit by bit, line by line. Not a single one ever says that diazinon causes these sort of effects lie., neurotoxicity]. Not one.
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There’s an article and it’s Defendant’s Exhibit No. 3.1 want you to look on page 149 of that article, in particular. It’s an article written by A1 Johnson together with Dr. Lassetor and two other people. And one of the conclusions of that article is that pesticides- — some pesticides have neurotoxic effects, yes. It doesn’t mention diazi-non. ... And the reason is because all organophosphates are different. Some are nerve gas, some kill people, some are insecticide. There’s not a single article anywhere that says diazinon causes these effects.
*424 [[Image here]]
We have never taken the position that Mr. Ellis did not have acute symptoms due to exposure of the diazinon. Where the case differs and where we differ from the plaintiff is whether Mr. Ellis’s current complaints are a result of the exposure to diazinon. Does he have long-term, delayed neurotoxicity as a result to the exposure to the diazinon. That’s the key issue in this case. All these other issues that you have to answer, especially the ones relating to damages, to medical expenses, to loss of wages, it all falls from that decision that you have to make.
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We have had article after article referred to, that have all been discussed, organo-phosphate poisoning and the effects of or-ganophosphate poisoning. We’ve tried to show — and I’ve been accused of nitpicking for doing it — that each article relied on ... doesn’t support a determination that exposure to diazinon does cause long-term delayed neurotoxicity, period. It didn’t support it. And what the plaintiff has tried to do is say the literature talks about organo-phosphate exposure, diazinon is an organo-phosphate, therefore this has got to be it....
(Emphasis added.)
The Court states that to determine now whether Maritime Overseas’ scientific evidence was unreliable “would base appellate review on a record that was not made.” Ante at 411. That simply is not true. Maritime Overseas did not ambush Ellis on the substance of the expert testimony. The record shows that it was, in counsel’s words, “the key issue” in the case. The parties purported to present all available evidence on the issue whether diazinon could cause neu-rotoxicity. This is not a case where a party could have offered more or different scientific evidence had it known that its opponent objected to the evidence as unreliable. Maritime Overseas reasserted its contentions in its motion for new trial and on appeal. There can be no question that Maritime Overseas challenged the reliability of Ellis’s scientific evidence.
D
The Court does not attempt to argue .that Ellis’s evidence had any probative value. It holds that even if the evidence had no probative value, it must be considered some evidence to support the judgment on appeal if it was not objected to. This holding is squarely contrary to Schaefer, Crye, Havner, and the other cases I have cited. The Court has two responses.
First, the Court says that to. allow an argument that scientific evidence admitted without objection was nevertheless unreliable and non-probative would “take away the trial court’s gatekeeping function” and thus would:
usurp the orderly and efficient disposition of appeals, deprive the proffering party of an opportunity to cure any defects in its evidence that the objecting party might pose, and in some cases, place appellate courts in the undesirable position of making decisions about evidentiary reliability absent a fully developed record.
Ante at 412. Of course, none of these evil effects is present in this ease. Ellis not only understood Maritime Overseas’ position and had every opportunity to cure the defects in his evidence, he and Maritime Overseas purported to offer all the evidence in existence on whether diazinon can cause neurotoxicity. There can be no question in this case that the record was fully developed. To say that a review of the sufficiency of evidence admitted without objection deprives the trial court of its gatekeeping function is to say that Schae-fer, Crye, and Havner were wrongly decided. In Schaefer, for example, a physician testified, just as in the present case, that the plaintiffs injury was caused by a particular agent. Defendant did not object to this testimony. Still, this Court held that the evidence had no probative value because there was nothing in the record to indicate that the injury could have occurred as the witness testified. The witness’s mere opinion was not enough to support a judgment. The same situation is present in this case, except that here the parties clearly made every
Second, the Court says that the cases I have cited — it refers to none of them by name — are distinguishable because “those cases involve no evidence challenges where, on the face of the record, the evidence lacked probative value_ In contrast, by its own admission, Maritime is not making a no evidence complaint.” Ante at 412. I have already explained that Maritime Overseas’ complaint is really that there is no evidence of some damages, and that the Court’s effort to categorize Maritime Overseas’ position more rigidly is unfair to the arguments made in its briefs. But assume that all the cases I have cited involved no-evidence challenges and that this case does not. What possible difference can that make to the Court? Why is the necessity of objection to the evidence less important when the appellate complaint is no evidence? As the Court’s own authority, Sumitomo Bank, points out, the necessity of objection is more important when the complaint is that there is no evidence to support a judgment and therefore judgment should be rendered in the complainant’s favor. When the request is only for a new trial, a reassessment of evidence admitted without objection is “acceptable”. Sumitomo Bank,
The Court’s attempts to distinguish Hav-ner, Crye, Schaefer, and the long line of cases that precedes them are flawed.
E
The use of scientific evidence at trial poses unique problems. Sometimes, as in Havner, the entire body of evidence is unreliable from a scientific viewpoint. At other times, as in Crye and Schaefer, the evidence is unreliable because it is based on assumptions that cannot be demonstrated. In still other cases, like this one, the evidence is unreliable only as it pertains to a part of the claims. For the most part, I agree with the Court that the issue of the reliability of scientific evidence should be raised in the trial court. The exception is when the evidence is plainly lacking in probative value — the moon is made of green cheese. But it is not at all clear what procedures should be used to raise reliability challenges. The Court refers to motions in limine, although as a general rule rulings on such motions do not preserve error. The Court also refers to summary judgments, although this procedure may not work well when testimony is important to illuminate the issue. The Court insists that there be an objection, but Havner shows the difficulty of objecting to an entire case. Moreover, once the issue has been identified, why should further objection be necessary?
For over two years, the Supreme Court Advisory Committee, which advises the Court on all rules of procedure, and the State Bar of Texas Committee on the Administration of Rules of Evidence, which monitors the operation of the Rules of Evidence, have tried to fashion rules governing the timing and manner of objections to scientific evidence. The seventy-plus members of these highly respected committees have broad experience and expertise in procedural and evi-dentiary matters. Last fall the Advisory Committee, after considering the work of the State Bar Committee, concluded that the problem of how and when to object to scientific evidence is complex and involves many difficult considerations. The Advisory Committee recommended to this Court that any rules await a development of the issues in appellate opinions carefully analyzing the various concerns. That counsel seemed sound at the time, but today’s confusing opinion makes the alternative of a rules solution far more appealing.
In simply mandating an objection before or during trial, the Court appears oblivious to the considerations its advisory committees believed to be complex and difficult. The Court’s analysis is really confined to a single thought: parties should not be “ambushed”. That relatively innocuous proposition simply cannot support the addition to our procedural jurisprudence of a vague and universal duty to object to scientific evidence before or during trial.
Maritime Overseas’ challenge to Ellis’s scientific evidence is valid. Although Ellis’s experts testified that Ellis’s exposure to diaz-inon caused neurotoxicity, there was no basis for their opinions in any scientific literature or experimentation. The experts reviewed all the literature regarding neurotoxicity from exposure to pesticides in general and organophosphates in particular; none was omitted. Nowhere in the literature is there any demonstration that diazinon causes neu-rotoxicity.
Ellis’s position is that diazinon is an orga-nophosphate, some organophosphates cause neurotoxicity (although some do not), and therefore diazinon causes neurotoxicity. The logical fallacy in this syllogism is apparent. The record establishes that no scientific evidence exists for concluding that diazinon is among the organophosphates that causes neurotoxicity or among those that do not. There is simply no way to tell.
In Havner, plaintiffs offered extensive epidemiological evidence showing a relationship between Bendectin and birth defects, but the relationship was never shown to be statistically significant. We held that that was no evidence to support a finding that Bendectin causes birth defects. The evidence in the present ease is even weaker than the evidence in Havner. Here there is no evidence at all, other than Ellis’s experts’ bare opinions, showing a relationship between diazinon exposure and neurotoxicity. Moreover, all physical medical evidence — electroencephalograms, peripheral nerve tests, an MRI, and a CAT scan — have shown Ellis to be in normal health, aside from problems relating to obesity, high blood pressure, smoking, and alcohol dependency. Under our precedents, the experts’ unsupported opinions cannot provide a basis for a judgment against Maritime Overseas.
í{: % sjt
Because there is no basis for Ellis’s experts’ opinions that his exposure to diazinon caused him to suffer from neurotoxicity, those opinions were not probative evidence and should not have been considered by the court of appeals in assessing the factual sufficiency of the evidence of causation of Ellis’s damages. Accordingly, I would reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand the case to that court to redetermine the factual sufficiency of the evidence.
