OPINION
This is an appeal from a Superior Court judgment resulting from a negligence action brought by Gordon Ondis on behalf of his minor daughter, Aleta, against the town of Lincoln and Norman Pión, a Lincoln police officer. The plaintiffs sought damages as a result of a 1974 accident in which Aleta, while riding her bicycle, was injured after having been struck by a motor vehicle operated by Officer Pión. The jury attributed fault for the accident in the following manner: Officer Pion was found to be 5 percent negligent; Aleta, it was determined, was 95 percent negligent. On appeal the plaintiffs raise two issues. The first claim is that mental suffering incurred by Aleta as a result of consciousness of a disfiguring mark resulting from the injury she sustained in the accident should have been allowed by the trial justice to be considered by the jury in assessing compensable damages. The second claim is that the trial justice erred in refusing to compel a physician who was sub
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poenaed to give testimony at trial to testify as an expert witness. In light of our recent holding in
Arlan v. Cervini,
R.I.,
The facts of this case stem from an August 24, 1974 collision at or near the intersection of Great Road and Meeting House Road in the town of Lincoln. Officer Pion was traveling on Great Road when shrubbery approximately twelve feet high blocked the view of the intersecting Meeting House Road out of which plaintiff Ale-ta Ondis came riding. Unable to see Aleta until she was no more than thirty feet in front of his vehicle, Officer Pion braked immediately; however, the left front bumper of his cruiser came in slight contact with the bicycle’s rear tire.
Aleta retained little recollection of the events just prior to and during the collision. As a result of the accident, however, she sustained several injuries, the most serious of which was to her left thigh. This area became swollen and did not diminish in size in the seven years between the accident and the trial.
During the course of the proceedings below, the trial justice struck testimony elicited from Aleta relating to mental suffering experienced by her as a result of her consciousness of her disfigurement. In his charge to the jurors, the trial justice reiterated that no consideration should be given by them to plaintiff’s mental suffering including shame, humiliation, or embarrassment arising from plaintiff’s consciousness of her disfigurement.
At the time of the accrual of this action and at the time of the trial of this case, the rule of compensation for a disfiguring injury was that enunciated in our opinion in
Halladay v. Ingram,
Recently, however, we expressly overruled
Halladay
in
Arlan v. Cervini,
— R.I. —,
“mental suffering, which may include nervousness, grief, anxiety, worry, shock, humiliation, embarrassment, or indignity, arising from consciousness of a facial or bodily scar, is a compensable element of damages. In so holding, we note that this rule has long been recognized in many other jurisdictions and reflects what we consider to be a sound and just approach to the problem of compensation for personal injuries. To the extent that our decision in Halladay is inconsistent with our holding today, it is overruled.” Arlan, R.I. at,478 A.2d at 980 . (Footnote omitted.)
We are therefore confronted with the issue of the extent, if any, of Arlan’s application to the case at bar. This issue depends entirely upon our determination of whether the doctrine of Arlan, which is now the prevailing law, should be applied to cases such as the case at bar that were pending on appeal at the time that opinion was filed.
In reaching our conclusion on this first issue, we note initially that applying a newly announced standard to facts occurring earlier in time than the announcement of
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that standard is to give retroactive effect to the newly fashioned rule. Instructive in the. area of this judicial determination are the cases of the United States Supreme Court that have commented on such practice. The Supreme Court has often recognized that the retroactive application of its new rules to cases subject to the Court’s power is neither compelled nor prohibited by the United States Constitution.
Desist v. United States,
In the field of criminal law, however, no more fertile ground exists in which to observe, among the Supreme Court’s decisions, “an extraordinary collection of rules * * * governing] the [retroactive or prospective] application” of newly enunciated principles of law.
Desist,
For instance, retroactive effect of new legal standards, has been given application “to the parties and facts of the case in which the new rule was announced, to other cases then pending, to cases that were ‘final’ in the sense of being no longer subject to direct review, and to cases tried or retried in the future but arising from earlier occurrences.” Annot.,
Among the United States Supreme Court’s cases in which fully retroactive effect was given to new rules are a number of hallmark decisions that have enhanced the rights of an accused criminal.
United States v. Tucker,
More commonly, however, the Supreme Court has chosen to apply the new rule only to the case in which the rule is announced and to other cases then pending on direct review.
Tehan v. United States ex rel. Shott,
“all ‘new’ rules of constitutional law must, at a minimum, be applied to all those cases which are still subject to direct review by this Court at the time the ‘new’ decision is handed down.
“[W]hen similarly situated defendants] com[e] before us, we must grant the same relief or give a principled reason for acting differently. We depart from this basic judicial tradition when we simply pick and choose from among similarly situated defendants those who alone will receive the benefit of a ‘new’ rule of constitutional law.” Desist,394 U.S. at 258-259 ,89 S.Ct. at 1039 ,22 L.Ed.2d at 260-61 (Harlan, J., dissenting).
Recently in
Shea v. Louisiana,
— U.S. —,
Although it may be argued that different policy considerations should govern when the retroactivity principle is considered in the context of criminal, as opposed to civil, cases, the Supreme Court has not been remiss in providing equally sound explanations for its decisions in which retroactive effect was given to new rules expounded in cases involving bankruptcy law,
Mosser v. Darrow,
In fact, in those cases in which the Supreme Court has chosen to give
prospective
effect to a new rule by confining its operation to future cases arising from fact situations occurring after the announcement of the new rule, the rationale for such action has been either that the new rule is such a departure from clear past precedent that fairness and the administration of justice compels it,
see Desist v. United States,
In Rhode Island, criminal cases involving the issue of retroactive or prospective application of a new rule have focused on the same issues with which the federal cases have been concerned. In
Mastracchio v. Houle,
— R.I. —,
“It must be considered that unlike the decisions in Mapp, Miranda, Wade, Gilbert, Katz, and even Gideon, the [United States Supreme] Court’s opinion in Ged-ers was not perceived to be a departure from established past principles. Geders was a decision based upon federal and state precedents. It did not constitute a seismic innovation, comparable to adoption of a new exclusionary rule or a new requirement for provision of counsel, in circumstances where none had been applied before.” Mastracchio, — R.I. at —,416 A.2d at 121-22 .
In other criminal cases, we have similarly given retroactive effect to newly announced standards applying them to cases pending on direct review.
State v. O’Coin,
— R.I. —,
Finally, in
State v. Arpin,
In
Ritter v. The Narragansett Electric Co.,
Considering the foregoing principles in light of the facts of the case at bar, we conclude that application of the rule announced in
Arlan, supra,
to cases pending on appeal is entirely appropriate. Essentially, we decided in
Arlan,
— R.I. at — n. 2,
In any event, our departure from the rule of
Halladay v. Ingram,
The second issue on appeal concerns the refusal of the trial justice to require an unwilling physician to testify as an expert on behalf of the plaintiff at trial. The physician, a plastic surgeon, had been subpoenaed by the plaintiff and did testify factually concerning the extent of the plaintiff’s injuries that he had observed and treated. He declined voluntarily to offer any opinions in respect to the medical prognosis relating to the injury. We have previously held in
L’Etoile v. Director of Public Works of Rhode Island,
For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs appeal is denied in part and sustained in part. The judgment is vacated in respect to damages, and the papers in the case may be remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial on the issue of damages only.
The Chief Justice participated in the oral argument and in the decision of the court, but he did not participate in the publication of the formal opinion.
Notes
. Although arriving at such fine distinctions in respect to calculating damages may have been *18 possible as legal fiction or in the fantasies of extraordinary thinkers like the great German jurist Von Jhering, in whose conception such hairsplitting was entirely possible, we humbly admit that a division of damages under the old rule was probably beyond the rational powers of the average juror. See Cohen, Transcendental Nonsense and the Functional Approach, 35 Colum.L.Rev. 809, 809 (1935).
