This case probes the issues of negligence and causation in the context of a personal injury lawsuit arising under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (“FELA”), 45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60 (1988). Plaintiff-appellant Robert Ulfik appeals from the April 26, 1995, judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (John S. Martin, Jr., Judge) granting a motion at the end of Ulfik’s ease-in-chief for judgment as a matter of law in favor of defendant-appellee Metro-North Commuter Railroad (“Metro-North”). Ulfik contends that the District Court erred in ruling that there was insufficient evidence to support a jury determination of either negligence or causation. Because we believe that, under the standards governing negligence and causation in FELA cases, the evidence was sufficient to create issues of fact for the jury to decide, we reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand for a new trial.
Background
Assessing the evidence, as we must, in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, we believe that the jury would have been entitled to find the following facts concerning the injuries that Robert Ulfik sustained after falling down a flight of stairs in Grand Central Terminal. In 1991, Ulfik was employed by Metro-North as a lever man in an underground railroad tower called “Tower U,” which is located beneath 57th Street and Park Avenue in New York City. Ulfik’s duties included operating the switching device at Tower U that helps to control the trains entering and leaving Grand Central Terminal. On July 15, 1991, Ulfik was scheduled to work the second shift from 2:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. He was assigned to work with two other employees, both of whom were to start their shift at 3:00 p.m. When Ulfik arrived for work that day, however, he noticed the unusual circumstance that two of the first-shift workers, Donald Hines and Alexander McCracken, were up on the street, rather than at their underground stations. When Ulfik went down to Tower U, he discovered that there were three supervisors manning the tower. One of the supervisors informed him that Hines and McCracken had become sick due to their inhalation of fumes from either paint or solvent that was being sprayed in the railroad tunnels.
At around 2:45 p.m., after the supervisors had left, Ulfik began to experience a burning
After work, Ulfik went directly to the emergency room of a nearby hospital, where he was examined by a doctor and underwent a series of pulmonary tests. Ulfik was never-apprised of the results of those tests. He was simply discharged from the emergency room and told to go home and rest. He was also advised that he should visit his own doctor if the symptoms persisted. Feeling dizzy the next morning, Ulfik went to visit his private doctor, Dr. Maximo Levin. Dr. Levin performed another series of pulmonary tests and instructed Ulfik to stay at home until the test results came back or until he felt better. Dr. Levin also told Ulfik to schedule a follow-up appointment in one week for July 23.
During the week, Ulfik continued to experience intermittent dizziness and did not return to work. He suffered from dizziness approximately seven or eight times a day at the beginning of the week, diminishing by the end of the week to perhaps three times a day. On July 17, Metro-North contacted Ulfik and told him to report to its medical office for an examination with Dr. Hurley on July 23. Believing that he had no choice, Ulfik agreed to the appointment. On the morning of July 23, however, Ulfik first went to see Dr. Levin and reported that he was still suffering from occasional dizziness. Dr. Levin told Ulfik that he should not go back to work yet, and provided Ulfik with a note to that effect. Dr. Levin also scheduled another follow-up appointment for July 30.
After his appointment with Dr. Levin on July 23, Ulfik called the Metro-North medical office and told the clerk on duty that he had been instructed by his doctor to stay at home. The clerk replied that Ulfik’s supervisor had ordered the examination .with Dr. Hurley, and that he was required to appear. Later that day, Ulfik’s wife drove him to the Metro-North medical office, which is located in Grand Central Terminal. Inside the Terminal, Ulfik met his co-worker, Joe Hunt, who had also been ordered to appear for an appointment that day. As Ulfik and Hunt were walking down a flight of stairs toward the medical office, Ulfik experienced a sudden wave of dizziness. He lost his balance, fell backwards, and slipped down the stairway.
Eventually, with the help of Hunt, Ulfik got up and proceeded to walk towards the medical office. When he arrived, he reported his accident to the secretary, and received some medical attention from one of the assistants. Later, Dr. Hurley came in, asked Ulfik a few questions, and gave him some forms for Dr. Levin to complete. Ulfik was then allowed to leave. On the afternoon of July 23, when Ulfik returned home, he began to notice some back and hip pain. The next day, he experienced such severe pain that he called Dr. Levin for advice. Dr. Levin referred Ulfik to an orthopedic specialist. Ulfik went to the specialist’s office that afternoon, where a doctor examined him and prescribed a course of physical therapy for Ulfik to perform three times a week.
On July 30, Ulfik went back to Dr. Levin for his third appointment. Dr. Levin told Ulfik that the test results had come back and that they failed to reveal any problems. Nonetheless, Ulfik continued to suffer from dizziness for at least a few more weeks until mid-August, when the dizziness subsided entirely. Ulfik’s back and hip pain persisted. In mid-August, Ulfik also began to develop some pain in his right knee. From August 1991 to October 1992, Ulfik’s condition deteriorated despite his physical therapy. He developed a limp on his right side. In October 1992, Ulfik decided to consult a new
At trial, Ulfik presented his own testimony, as well as the testimony of Dr. Hedrych and two of Ulfik’s co-workers, Hines and Hunt. Ulfik testified concerning the events that occurred between July 15, 1991, and October 1992. He also presented the Accident/Injury Reports that he had completed on July 15. Dr. Hedrych, testifying as Ul-fik’s expert witness, opined that Ulfik’s back, hip, and knee injuries had resulted from his July 23 accident on the stairway. Dr. He-drych was unable to give an opinion as to the original cause of Ulfik’s dizziness. Hines and Hunt both testified that on July 15 they smelled an odor of chemical fumes in Tower U. Both also stated that they suffered that day from headaches, nausea, and dizziness. Questions concerning their post-July 15 physical conditions, however, were successfully objected to on the ground of relevance. Hunt also corroborated Ulfik’s testimony concerning his fall down the flight of stairs. Finally, Ulfik presented the deposition testimony of a Metro-North train master who stated that around July 15, a contractor, third-party defendant-appellee Yonkers Contracting, was engaged in rebuilding the tunnel near Tower U. This rebuilding involved the spraying of paint.
At the close of Ulfik’s case-in-chief, the District Court granted Metro-North’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, ruling that there was insufficient evidence on the issues of negligence and causation.
Discussion
I. Excluded Testimony
At the outset, we deem it necessary to consider one evidentiary issue. Ulfik contends that the District Court erred in excluding the testimony of Hines and Hunt regarding their post-July 15 physical conditions. Although no offer of proof was made, Hines and Hunt presumably would have testified that they continued to suffer from dizziness and other symptoms even after July 15. The District Court, however, excluded this testimony on the ground of relevance. We believe that this ruling was incorrect. Although “[djeterminations of relevance are entrusted to the sound discretion of the trial judge,” United States v. Quiroz,
The question of whether Hines and Hunt continued to suffer from dizziness even after July 15 bears directly on the issue of causation in this case. Hines and Hunt were subject to the same working conditions in Tower U on July 15 as Ulfik was. If the two co-workers also suffered from dizziness on July 23 in the same manner as Ulfik did, this would tend to show the existence of a causal connection between the working conditions in Tower U on July 15 and Ulfik’s dizziness eight days later. Although Metro-North argues that different intervening circumstances occurring after July 15 would make it difficult to compare Hines and Hunt with Ulfik, we believe that any such differences at most affect the weight of the evidence, not its relevance. The evidence still has the capacity to make the fact at issue — the causal relationship between the conditions in Tower U and Ulfik’s symptoms prior to his fall— more probable than it would be without the evidence. See Fed.R.Evid. 401. Furthermore, the circumstances surrounding all three co-workers were sufficiently similar and so readily provable that the possibility for confusion or delay does not substantially outweigh the probative value of the testimony. See Fed.R.Evid. 403. Therefore, on remand, the District Court should allow Hines and Hunt to testify concerning their post-July 15 physical conditions.
The Supreme Court has instructed that a relaxed standard of proof concerning causation applies in FELA cases. The test is whether “the proofs justify with reason the conclusion that employer negligence played any part, even the slightest, in producing the injury....” Rogers v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Co.,
A. Negligence
In this case, we believe that the District Court erred in finding that Ulfik failed to adduce sufficient evidence to support a determination of negligence.
The touchstone of this negligence inquiry is the issue of foreseeability-whether or not Metro-North knew or should have known of the potential hazard. Syverson,
Metro-North argues that Ulfik failed to present any medical evidence concerning the toxicity of the paint. Ulfik, however, need not prove that the paint was toxic, only that Metro-North could have reasonably foreseen that the paint would increase the likelihood of injury, and that Metro-North failed to take reasonable precautions. The Supreme Court’s analysis in Gallick is instructive on this point. See Gallick,
Metro-North can prevail no more successfully in this case by arguing that it was unforeseeable that the continued exposure of its employees to potentially noxious paint fumes would cause injury. See Syverson,
B. Causation
We believe that Ulfik also presented sufficient evidence to support a finding of causation. In this ease, the chain of causation consists of three potential links: (1) whether the paint fumes on July 15 caused Ulfik’s dizziness on July 23, (2) whether Ulfik’s dizziness on July 23 caused him to fall down the stairs that day, and (3) whether Ulfik’s fall down the stairs caused his current debilitated condition. The only contested issue arises as to the first link. Concerning the second link, Ulfik testified that his fall was caused by a sudden wave of dizziness. We believe that his testimony regarding this non-teehnical matter is sufficient to create an issue of fact for the jury. Concerning the third link, Dr. Hedrych’s expert testimony sufficed to show that Ulfik’s accident on July 23 caused his current debilitated condition.
The only disputed link in the causal chain concerns whether or not the paint fumes on July 15 caused Ulfik’s dizziness eight days later on July 23. On this issue, Ulfik presented both his own testimony and the testimony of Hines and Hunt, who stated that after smelling chemical fumes in Tower U on July 15, they suffered from symptoms similar to Ulfik’s. Metro-North, however, asserts that this evidence is insufficient as a matter of law to support a showing of causation, because expert medical testimony is required. Metro-North relies on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Claar v. Burlington Northern Railroad Co.,
Claar and Moody, however, are distinguishable from this case. In Claar, the Ninth Circuit specifically limited its holding to those situations where some “special expertise [is] necessary to draw a causal inference.” Claar,
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand for a new trial.
Notes
. The Supreme Court has not expressly held that a relaxed standard for negligence, as distinguished from causation, applies under FELA. Cf. Gallick,
Though the issue of negligence is still governed by the common law requirement of foreseeability in order to determine whether or not a defendant is required to guard against a particular risk, the concept of foreseeability has been construed somewhat more liberally in FELA cases than it might otherwise be under common law. See, e.g., Burns v. Penn Central Co.,
