delivered the opinion of the court:
This appeal involves a collision between a freight train and an automobile which occurred just after noon on January 9, 2001, on Army Trail Road in Bloomingdale, Illinois. The owner and maintainer of the tracks, defendant Illinois Central Railroad Company, d/b/a Canadian National/Illinois Central Railroad Company (CNIC or railroad), knew that snow and road salt had caused the intersection’s warning gates and lights to malfunction and was using a stop-and-flag procedure there until the signals were repaired. On this particular dry, sunny Tuesday afternoon, however, a CNIC dispatcher mistakenly advised a northwestbound train’s engineer that the signal problem had been fixed, and the train, consisting of three locomotives and 63 cars, proceeded through the intersection at 50 miles per hour. The passengers of the southbound automobile it struck, plaintiffs Fidel and Francisca Velarde, and the driver of the automobile, the Velardes’ adult daughter, Lilia Apulello, sustained primarily internal and closed-head injuries when their 1998 Ford Explorer was broadsided and then rolled several times. The Velardes filed a negligence action against CNIC and the owner and operator of the train, defendant Chicago Central & Pacific Railroad Company (CC&P). Lilia filed a separate action against the same two defendants, which was consolidated with her parents’ suit. As a result of her head injuries, however, Lilia was subsequently declared a disabled person, and her co-guardians, The Northern Trust Company and her husband, Rafael Apulello, became the plaintiffs to her claim (Lilia or the Apulellos). Rafael also added a claim of his own for loss of consortium. A jury awarded more than $54 million to the occupants of the Ford Explorer and apportioned 60% liability to CNIC, 35% to CC&P and 5% to Lilia, resulting in a slight reduction of the monetary awards. The jury also awarded Rafael $3.5 million. The trial judge entered judgment on the awards and denied motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and a new trial. On appeal, CNIC and CC&P contend (1) the use of a day-in-the-life video about Lilia, (2) the slight allocation of negligence to Lilia, (3) the large awards, and (4) improper closing arguments warrant a new trial on the issues of liability and damages, or damages alone, or alternatively, remittitur by $38 million.
The focus of defendants’ appeal is their contention they were “ambushed” by the Velardes and Apulellos on the first day of trial with a 22-minute day-in-the-life video about Lilia. Defendants state they were surprised by the video’s existence, vehemently and repeatedly objected to its presentation to the jury, and then suffered a predictable “bloodbath” in excessive damages and badly misallocated fault when the video unfairly elicited sympathy for plaintiffs. Defendants contend the case must be retried without the video.
The facts pertinent to this issue are as follows. In March 2001, defendants issued Rule 213 interrogatories (177 Ill. 2d R. 213), which included a question as to whether any photographs, movies and/or videotapes had been taken of the accident scene or the vehicle or persons involved. In June 2001, Lilia answered this question, “None.” Trial was scheduled for Monday, January 28, 2002. Fact and opinion discovery closed in mid-November 2001. The video was recorded on January 8 and 12, or on January 8 and 16, 2002 — the earlier dates appear in the transcripts and briefs, and the latter are marked on the copy of the video used during the trial. The Apulellos’ attorney finished editing the raw video footage on Friday, January 25, 2002.
On Monday, January 28, 2002, the Apulellos’ attorney told defense counsel that he had the video and intended to use it at trial. The video was discussed for the first time on the record that day, during the presentation of numerous motions in limine. At that point, neither the judge nor defendants had viewed the recording, and the judge deferred ruling on its admissibility.
The video was next addressed immediately after jury selection, on Tuesday, January 29, 2002. The Apulellos’ attorney again raised the subject, describing the film as “demonstrative” rather than substantive evidence of the nature and extent of Lilia’s injuries and indicating the parties were still exchanging demonstrative exhibits. The defense attorney acknowledged the defense was still working on a diagram, but said he was objecting to plaintiffs’ use of the video because it was “way past any discovery disclosure time” and contained “testimonial” audio and unnecessary scenes. The Apulellos’ attorney then offered to use the video without the audio track, said he would take out scenes showing Lilia’s sister and nephew cleaning the house, and suggested the attorneys could meet that evening to reach an agreement about what else to “take out.” The trial judge said “Okay,” and then proceeded to address other aspects of the trial. The attorneys met that evening. According to a sworn statement from the Apulellos’ attorney, he edited scenes from the video immediately after the attorneys met, in “strict accordance” with defense counsel’s requests, and this version of the video was used at trial. The record shows the Apulellos’ attorney played a few minutes of the video without the audio track during his opening statements, without objection from defendants. There was also no objection when Lilia’s sister and Rafael narrated portions of the silenced recording while they described Lilia’s weekday and weekend activities.
However, at the end of the week, on Friday, February 1, 2002, defense counsel broached the topic with the judge, stating:
“[DEFENDANTS’ COUNSEL]: [The Apulellos’ attorney] and I met [Tuesday night] at my office. I said, Look, I’ll withdraw my objection if A, you take the audio out, B, some other parts and the other thing I said is I want the outtakes, I wanted unedited tapes, that was my deal.
I haven’t gotten them, and my indication here today is I’m not going to get those unedited tapes. If that’s the case then I’m going to renew my objection.”
The Apulellos’ counsel responded that according to the supreme court’s opinion in Cisarik v. Palos Community Hospital,
[DEFENDANTS’ COUNSEL]: Judge, *** I don’t have it here because this issue just came up, [but] there is actually some [case law] that [indicates] *** I’m even entitled to be there at the time these [scenes] are filmed. This is essentially no matter how you cut it, whether there is voice on it or no voice on it, a day in the life is a testimonial presentation. I can’t cross[-] examine the film.
The only thing I can do is see what was pulled out. What was pulled out is in essence a way that I could cross[-]examine ***. *** I’m renewing my objection if I don’t get those outtakes.”
The Apulellos’ attorney responded that Cisarik was case law directly on point and that it shielded the Apulellos’ outtakes from discovery. He questioned whether he would be expected to bring in all the drafts of any other trial exhibit. The defense attorney admitted that he was unfamiliar with Cisarik, but stated, “I was withdrawing an objection *** to the video because they agreed, A, to take out the audio, B, because they agreed to take out pieces of it, and I said C, I want the outtakes.” The trial judge reassured defense counsel that he would receive plaintiffs’ outtakes if the defense was legally entitled to them. However, after the defense attorney reviewed Cisarik during a break in the proceedings, he stated:
“[DEFENDANTS’ COUNSEL]: Judge, for the record, I am not going to disagree with what [the Apulellos’ counsel] said Cisarik says. It does.
I just want to make clear on the record my objection because, on the record, I disagree with Cisarik. I think it is wrong.
My objection is A, that in my view it should have been produced during discovery so I am renewing that objection.
B, I believe the outtakes are not work product, and that’s it.” Nevertheless, in their combined posttrial motion for a new trial and judgment notwithstanding the verdict, defendants argued in part that the video should have been barred because defendants were wrongfully denied plaintiffs’ outtakes. The Apulellos responded that the version used at trial was in fact “defense-approved.” They summarized the proceedings quoted above and tendered the affidavit referenced above in which plaintiffs’ counsel described his interaction with the defense attorney. Defendants moved to strike the attorney’s affidavit, arguing that it contradicted an on-the-record statement of facts, and the trial judge denied the motion without comment.
Defendants’ first specific contention about the video is that it contained fact and opinion testimony and was therefore “substantive evidence” which should have been barred from the trial because it was not timely disclosed in response to defendants’ Rule 213 interrogatories. 177 Ill. 2d Rs. 213(a), (d). Rule 213(i) imposes a continuing duty on a party to “seasonably supplement or amend any prior answer or response whenever new or additional information subsequently becomes known to that party.” 177 Ill. 2d R. 213(i). In addition to citing the various paragraphs of Rule 213 and a host of related cases, defendants cite Wiker v. Pieprzyca-Berkes,
The admission of a film into evidence is within the sound discretion of the trial court (Carney v. Smith,
Defendants’ assertion that the day-in-the-life video was substantive evidence is refuted by the opinion which the Apulellos repeatedly cited at trial and defendants now almost ignore, Cisarik,
The appellate court disagreed only slightly with the trial judge’s approach and found that because the film’s preparation itself was not evidence, the plaintiffs attorney could make the film without opposing counsel in attendance. Cisarik,
On further appeal to the supreme court, however, the entire protective order was reversed. Cisarik,
Cisarik makes clear that day-in-the-life-films are considered demonstrative evidence which helps jurors understand witness testimony, rather than additional substantive evidence. Furthermore, it appears defendants’ “substantive evidence” arguments more or less repeat Cisarik’s dissent. For example, the dissent emphasized that pretrial discovery promotes fair, efficient, and expeditious proceedings leading to the truth, rather than “trial as a battle of wits” (Cisarik,
As for Wiker, it concerned a surveillance video that was never used at trial; therefore, it was only dictum when the court indicated a surveillance video must be disclosed before it can be used at a trial even for cross-examination. Wiker,
Thus, we are not persuaded by defendants’ arguments that a retrial is warranted because the day-in-the-life video was disclosed and tendered too late in the proceedings.
Defendants’ second main contention about the video is that they were entitled to discover the plaintiffs’ outtakes but the trial judge erroneously read Cisarik as an indication that outtakes are protected by the attorney work product privilege and plaintiffs’ counsel reneged on an agreement to surrender them. Defendants argue Cisarik's “true holding” does not support the judge’s ruling and urge this court to consider that the Cisarik briefs filed in the supreme court and now appended to defendants’ reply brief did not ask the court to conclude that outtakes are privileged. Defendants also argue the trial judge should have stricken the affidavit of the Apulellos’ attorney in which he described his interaction with defense counsel, because the affidavit contradicted an on-the-record statement that there was an agreement to tender all the outtakes. Defendants contend that the prejudice which resulted from their inability to use the outtakes entitles them to a new trial without the film.
The Apulellos respond that defendants already conceded on the record that Cisarik shielded the Apulellos’ outtakes from discovery, and, therefore, the argument is waived on appeal. Further, the concession was correct; the trial judge’s application of the case was also correct; and this intermediate court of appeal has no authority to contradict a higher court’s opinion. In a motion ordered taken with the case, the Apulellos contend the Cisarik briefs are not properly before this court and should be stricken from defendants’ reply brief. As for the accuracy of their attorney’s affidavit regarding the extent of his agreement with defense counsel, according to the Apulellos, the record discloses they consistently refused to produce their own outtakes based on Cisarik and its indications about outtakes and the attorney work product doctrine. The Velardes add the record shows they were not involved in the dispute about the outtakes.
We find defendants waived any contention they were prejudiced by their lack of access to the Apulellos’ outtakes, because defendants failed to object when the edited video was first shown to the jury during the Apulellos’ opening statements and when it was used to illustrate witness testimony. Chubb/Home Insurance Cos. v. Outboard Marine Corp.,
An additional reason for finding waiver is that defendants conceded on the record on February 1, 2002, that they were not entitled to the Apulellos’ outtakes, based on Cisarik and the attorney work product doctrine. The transcript quoted earlier indicates defense counsel £<disagree[d] with Cisarik” and thought the supreme court’s determination was “wrong,” but that he conceded the decision supported the Apulellos’ position.
Furthermore, the concession about access to the outtakes was correct, because Cisarik plainly states that “opposing counsel has no right to intrude into the production of [a day-in-the-life film].” Cisarik,
We are also unpersuaded that the trial judge erred by denying, without comment, defendants’ motion to strike the sworn statement of the Apulellos’ attorney regarding his meeting with defense counsel about use of the video at trial. See Hartgraves v. Don Cartage Co.,
Defendants’ next major contention about the video is that any probative value of the video was outweighed by the danger of prejudice to defendants. The Apulellos respond that the video cannot be characterized as unfairly prejudicial when it was approved by defense counsel, raised no objection, and is actually bland and innocuous. The Velardes suggest that any further response from them would be superfluous.
We have watched the exhibit at issue. It shows Lilia engaging in ordinary activities, including waking up, eating meals with her family, taking oral medication, dressing, brushing her hair, stripping linens from her bed, loading the clothes washer and dryer, putting on an overcoat, getting into the passenger’s seat of a sport utility vehicle, and visiting her mother’s house and a grocery market. We note that in many scenes, a family member prompts Lilia or helps Lilia in some other way to complete the activity, such as when she is encouraged to take the oral medication or do the laundry. Noteworthy exceptions to this pattern are at her mother’s house, where Lilia rearranges the pillows on the living room sofa so that she can nap, and at the market where she strays away while her sister fills the shopping cart. Throughout the film, Lilia appears anxious and easily confused and she is frequently tearful. In our opinion, however, the film does not dwell on her discomfort. Additionally, the film seems to illustrate the impact of head trauma and possibly resulting medication on Lilia’s life, consistent with witness testimony indicating, as examples, that Lilia took medication prescribed by her neurologist, had difficulty sustaining attention, needed someone to “cue her in” and give reminders, could not think flexibly or find solutions to problems, could not manage utensils, and was frustrated, fearful, anxious and extremely depressed. Testimony to that effect would have been given even if the illustrating video was never presented to the jury. Furthermore, the testimony regarding Lilia’s life after the collision was not closely balanced and we cannot conclude that the video tipped the verdict in plaintiffs’ favor. In addition, although defendants contend that some of the scenes were irrelevant and that the probative value of other scenes was destroyed because they were cut short, these, contentions are unpersuasive, given that the video was edited to the satisfaction of defense counsel before it was used during opening statements. We also reject defendants’ unsubstantiated suggestion that the video may have included exaggerated and self-serving behaviors. Defendants do not cite any portion of the record indicating they objected to use of the video on this basis at trial; thus, they cannot now complain of error. Thomas v. Industrial Comm’n,
In summary, we are not persuaded by any of defendants’ arguments regarding the Apulellos’ use of the day-in-the-life video at trial.
Defendants’ fourth main contention on appeal concerns the jury’s allocation of negligence, 60%, 35%, and 5% to CNIC, CC&P and Lilia, respectively. Defendants argue none of the responsibility should have been assigned to CC&fl since it operated the train with “due care,” and that at least half of the responsibility should have been attributed to Lilia. In a negligence action, the plaintiff must establish that the defendant owed a duty of care, that the defendant breached that duty, and that the plaintiff incurred injuries proximately caused by the breach. Espinoza v. Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Ry. Co.,
The defendants unsuccessfully presented their allocation-of-negligence arguments to the trial judge in a single motion seeking judgment notwithstanding the verdict for CC&P or a new trial for defendants. CC&P’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (judgment n.o.v.) should have been granted if all the evidence, viewed mostly favorably to Lilia, so overwhelmingly favored CC&P that no contrary verdict based on that evidence could ever stand. Maple v. Gustafson,
On the other hand, when presented with CC&P and CNIC’s motion for a new trial, the trial judge was expected to weigh the evidence. Maple,
Defendants now summarize only certain evidence and related legal principles. This is not an effective means of establishing that all the evidence, viewed most favorably to Lilia, overwhelmingly favored CC&P or that the manifest weight of the evidence favored CC&P and CNIC. For example, CC&P contends the evidence shows CC&P acted reasonably and that Lilia did not prove that CC&P negligently failed to keep an adequate lookout and negligently failed to decrease speed when the train crew saw vehicles continue to go over the track crossing. CC&P asserts the evidence showed the train’s engineer, Dallas Harken, and conductor, John Snapp, were looking ahead for vehicles, while traveling at a lawful rate of speed. Further, engineer Harken saw vehicles continuing to cross when the train was still “a pretty far distance away,” and conductor Snapp saw them when the train was about 600 feet from the crossing and stated it was not uncommon for cars to cross when a train was approaching. CC&P cites Robertson v. New York Central R.R. Co.,
Defendants engage in a similarly incomplete and ineffective analysis of some of the evidence presented to the jury in support of plaintiffs’ allegations that CC&P failed to obey an applicable operating rule and failed to sufficiently sound the train’s horn.
When considering all the evidence in a light most favorable to Lilia, we cannot say that it so overwhelmingly favored judgment for CC&P on plaintiffs’ claims that the verdict against the train operator cannot stand. Nor can we say that the negligence verdict or the 60%, 35%, and 5% apportionment of fault amongst the various parties involved in the collision was against the manifest weight of the evidence. The record does not indicate that the opposite conclusions were clearly evident or that the jury’s findings were unreasonable, arbitrary, or not based on any of the evidence. The jury’s verdict was supported by the evidence and there was no apparent basis for the trial court to disturb it. Accordingly, the trial court’s ruling as to CC&P’s motion for judgment n.o.v. and defendants’ motion for a new trial is affirmed.
We next address defendants’ fifth main contention on appeal: the jury’s noneconomic damage awards were excessive as a matter of law and should be subjected to a new trial or remitted. According to defendants, Fidel’s $15.5 million award for pain and suffering and disability should be reduced by $11.5 million, and his wife Francisca’s $5.5 million award for pain and suffering and disability should be reduced by $4 million. Also, Lilia’s $28 million award for pain and suffering and disability should be reduced by $21 million, and her husband Rafael’s $3.5 million award for loss of consortium should be reduced by $1.5 million. The Apulellos and Velardes respond that the damage awards were fair and reasonable in light of the permanent and catastrophic injuries that occurred.
The amount of a verdict is generally at the discretion of the jury. Dahan v. UHS of Bethesda, Inc.,
Defendants assert that the verdicts meet not just one but all three of the standards for construing the verdicts as “way out of line.”
Defendants cite Richardson,
One of the cases Richardson relied upon, Tierney, was a medical malpractice case in which the plaintiff suffered “substantial” injuries and “unique” suffering after having a stroke and was expected to have a “particularly difficult time adjusting to his new disabilities.” Tierney,
“With regard to defendants’ arguments that the jury’s verdict should be compared to other similar awards and thereby found to be excessive, this is simply not the law in Illinois. [Citations.] It is not within our purview to establish a new standard of review for such cases when the clear weight of Illinois authority has been to reject the 'comparison’ concept.” Tierney,268 Ill. App. 3d at 1065 ,645 N.E.2d at 294 .
Defendants cite two other cases for the proposition that we should examine prior verdicts to establish a comparative range. However, the court’s “comparison” in Johnson v. May,
“The reported case law shows that persons afflicted with posttraumatic stress disorder arising from accidents comparable in severity to [the plaintiffs] have received as much as a half a million dollars in noneconomic damages from the negligent party. While the magnitude of that award is scarcely controlling in other cases, we think that it is at least some indicia of just how far off the mark the jury’s verdict [of $20,609.60 for noneconomic damages] was in this case.” Johnson,223 Ill. App. 3d at 488 ,585 N.E.2d at 231 .
We do not read Johnson to mean that a bare comparison of dollar figures is an appropriate basis for deeming an award excessive.
Defendants’ other case, House v. Stocker,
Defendants’ additional contentions that the awards are so large they must have been the result of passion or prejudice on the part of the jury and they shock the judicial conscience are adequately supported with citation to Richardson. Richardson,
Defendants’ final contention is that despite defendants’ failure to object, even in a sidebar, portions of the Apulellos’ and Velardes’ separate closing arguments were prejudicial to such an extent that a new trial is necessary. Defendants also remark upon some of the Apulellos’ opening statements but have waived this contention by failing to support it with citation to any authority. Avery v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
The scope of closing arguments is within the trial judge’s sound discretion, and an argument must be prejudicial before a reviewing court will reverse on this basis. Lewis v. Cotton Belt Route-St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co.,
A court of review should “strictly apply the waiver doctrine unless the prejudicial error involves flagrant misconduct or behavior so inflammatory that the jury verdict is a product of biased passion, rather than an impartial consideration of the evidence.” Gillespie v. Chrysler Motors Corp.,
Belfield was a will contest involving allegations and evidence that only one of the various defendants exerted undue influence over the testator, yet the plaintiffs’ attorneys referred to all of the defendants as “thieves,” “usurpers,” and “defrauders.” Belfield,
The Belfield standard was also discussed in an appeal from a medical malpractice judgment, Simmons,
We reach the same conclusions about the closing arguments which defendants now object to for the first time on appeal. The issue has been waived.
For instance, the jury was told that Lilia needed the supervision and guidance given to an eight- or nine-year-old, that her sister helped her use the washroom, bathe, and perform other hygiene, that Lilia could not return to her former occupation and was incapable of independently completing ordinary tasks such as doing the household laundry, that she preferred to use her hands instead of a fork at meal time, and that she no longer engaged in meaningful conversations with her sister. Defendants now object, however, that the following statement to the jury was a miseharacterization of the facts:
“[THE APULELLOS’ COUNSEL]: Disability. Is she disabled? Can she do anything? Go to the bathroom? Eat food? She can’t talk to anybody. She doesn’t have any kind of life. Can’t work anymore. She can’t enjoy life. *** She’s not able to do anything without the assistance of others and she is a danger to herself. She needs somebody to watch her all the time. That’s how disabled she is.”
Contrary to defendants’ assertion, we find these remarks were merely permissible inferences or conclusions based on the evidence about Lilia’s disabilities.
The jury was also told that Lilia’s ability to report earlier memories began deteriorating, that she was no longer fluent in two languages, her intellectual functioning was blunted, and she had difficulty writing and remembering words and made mistakes copying from one sheet of paper to another. The jury was also told that Lilia’s long-term prospects are poor. Nevertheless, defendants now object that the Apulellos’ counsel mischaracterized the facts by making statements such as Lilia “will not get her brain back,” she has a “broken brain, missing memories, [is] the shadow of a human being, a woman who, according to Dr. Fajardo is basically now heading for a vegetative state.” We reject defendants’ assessment of these remarks.
We are similarly unpersuaded that it was prejudicial for the Apulellos’ counsel to say that because defendants “blame[ed] the driver” by eliciting testimony from accident witnesses who were not struck by the train, defendants’ admission of responsibility was actually a “half truth.” The “half truth” remark is an even milder characterization than the one made during the Simmons trial which did not warrant retrial: “ ‘When your own people won’t stand behind you and testify in your behalf, then you know you’re wrong.’ ” Simmons,
Defendants also contend the Apulellos improperly appealed to the jury’s emotions by referring to other family members during closing arguments. Defendants cite LeMaster v. Chicago Rock Island & Pacific R.R. Co.,
“[THE APULELLOS’ COUNSEL]: You know, they’re supposed to stop and protect this crossing. If they had stopped and protected it, of course, none of this would have happened, so what [Lilia] did or didn’t do has nothing to do with what caused the accident. They set it all in motion. They did, the railroads.
The stop and protect that really is at issue today is that you have to stop; you have to protect; you have to protect this family.”
In light of the fact that all of the plaintiffs were indisputably “family”—husband Fidel, wife Francisca, daughter Lilia, and son-in-law Rafael— we construe this concluding remark as a permissible, nonprejudicial reference to parties before the jury, rather than to nonparty family members.
Finally, defendants address two aspects of the Velardes’ closing arguments. Although defendants did not object in the trial court, they now argue “The Velarde[s’] counsel compared plaintiffs’ losses to property damage — a $50 million Monet — effectively forcing the jury to award more out of sheer guilt [citation]. The guilt trip was compounded by an incorrect statement that the law required a large award [citation].” The following portion of the proceedings is pertinent:
“[THE VELARDES’ COUNSEL]: Now, if this were an easier case and we weren’t dealing with these types of injuries and this was a case of property damage, and if that train had come barreling through that crossing at 50 miles per hour and had hit a truck and that truck was carrying a painting, a Monet painting, an impressionistic painting, and it destroyed it, and there was a lawsuit that was ensued and every expert in the world testified this was one of the great paintings in the world, this Mr. Monet, who’s been deceased for a lot of years, who was truly one of the great painters, and every expert testified that that painting had a value of $50 million and one of the jurors went back and said, you know, I don’t like impressionistic paintings, I just don’t appreciate it, I can’t award $50 million, I could maybe award $25 million. Well, that wouldn’t be full justice. It wouldn’t be fair justice. It would be half justice.
And wouldn’t it be a shame in this case if this case were decided for any reason other than the law and the facts.
Let’s not confuse the two cases, a property damage case and a case like this, a case applicable to catastrophic, devastating injuries to Fidel and Francisca, which by necessity under the law have to be large.
I want to talk a little bit about the elements of damages the Judge is going to instruct you on ***.”
We fail to comprehend defendants’ argument regarding the analogy to a Monet painting. We do not see how referring to a skillful painter or expensive artwork could in any way cause jurors to feel “guilt” over injuries they had no hand in causing. Further, because none of the cited cases discuss a “guilt trip” standard, we construe defendants’ argument as an assertion that the Monet analogy was, in some way, an appeal to emotion or prejudice. See Gillespie,
We conclude that the Apulellos’ and Velardes’ closing arguments did not deny defendants a fair trial or result in a deterioration of the judicial process. We also note that trial counsel, who heard the remarks firsthand and was able to observe their impact on the jurors, did not consider them worthy of contemporaneous objection, even through a sidebar, or necessitating a curative instruction.
Affirmed; plaintiffs’ motion taken with the case not considered.
GORDON and McNULTY, JJ., concur.
