Defendants-appellees have moved to strike from plaintiff-appellant’s Opening Brief Specification of Error 1, and all references thereto and argument thereon contained in that brief.
The specification of error asserts that this court erred when it ordered a new trial upon the previous appeal in this casé, Young v. Price,
After we rendered the opinion reported at
This is not an exceptional case. It is frivolous to argue that a denial of a constitutional right occurred when this court found prejudicial error in the denial of defendants’ motion for a mistrial. The doctrine of the law of the case is fully applicable. On the former appeal defendants argued in no uncertain terms that “this irrelevant, sympathy-kindling evidence was specifically and deliberately elicited by plaintiff’s counsel through pointed or leading questions.” Plaintiff had her day in court on the matter. Other considerations aside, this element of the case, taken up in our former opinion at p. 28 of the official report (
Morever, there was further prejudicial error on the first trial in permitting use of a mathematical formula for computing damages for pain and suffering in the argument made by plaintiff’s counsel to the jury (
“The power to limit the new trial to the question of damages of course exists, but whether we should do so rests in our judicial discretion.”
We further pointed out in note 2:
“Not to be overlooked is the sympathy which is evoked in a jury by evidence as to a plaintiff’s injuries and suffering. It is only practical to recognize that the effect thereof may spill over into the liability area. Cf., Moss v. Associated Transp., Inc.,344 F.2d 23 , 25-6 (6th Cir.). Where there is anything that smacks of misconduct in connection with the evidence as to plaintiff’s injuries and suffering, the court surely has discretion to prevent plaintiff from taking advantage of it by retaining intact the verdict of liability, possibly evoked by the sympathy caused by such evidence. So, in Young v. Price,48 Haw. 22 ,395 P.2d 365 , we remanded for a complete new trial though the errors went to the damages.”
We adhere to that position.
The motion is granted.
Notes
In regard to our discretion to remand for a complete new trial instead of limiting the new trial to damages, plaintiff again makes the argument that: “Where the reasons for sending the case back for a new trial have not hitherto been known to the law of Hawaii, such a grant of the new trial deprives that individual litigant of his rights to a jury trial.” We have characterized this argument as frivolous.
