Court Opinion

ID: 9366084
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-01-25 20:03:57.134801+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:15:48.851889
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

SHARON SMACK-DIXON and                     )
WILLIAM MASON DIXON,                       )
                                           )
                               Plaintiffs, )
                                           )
              v.                           ) C.A. No. N18C-09-220 PRW
                                           )
WAL-MART, INC.                             )
                                           )
                               Defendant. )

                              Submitted: January 7, 2023
                              Decided: January 25, 2023

                                         ORDER

              Upon Defendant Wal-Mart, Inc’s Motion for a New Trial,
                                  DENIED.

       This 25th day of January, 2023, upon consideration of the Defendant’s motion

for a new trial (D.I. 82), the Plaintiffs’ response (D.I. 85), and the record in this

matter, it appears to the Court that:

       (1)    Plaintiff Sharon Smack-Dixon filed a personal injury lawsuit against

Wal-Mart, Inc. for injuries arising out of a slip-and-fall at a Wal-Mart store in

Seaford, Delaware on October 22, 2016. Ms. Smack-Dixon complained she suffered

injuries requiring her to undergo back and hip surgery.1

       (2)    As relevant here, Mrs. Smack-Dixon designated one of her treating

1
    Mr. Dixon was added as a plaintiff when the Complaint was amended to include a claim for
loss of consortium. D.I. 41.

                                            - 1-
doctors, Nichols Theodore, M.D., as her expert medical witness. Before trial, Wal-

Mart sought to preclude portions of Dr. Theodore’s proffered testimony concerning

Mrs. Smack-Dixon’s hip injury.2

        (3)      The Court denied Wal-Mart’s motion in limine, finding Dr. Theodore

was qualified to opine on the causation question.3

        (4)      The action was subsequently tried before a jury. The jury returned a

verdict finding Wal-Mart negligent, that Wal-Mart’s negligence was a proximate

cause of Ms. Smack-Dixon’s injuries, and that Ms. Smack-Dixon was in no way

negligent in the slip-and-fall incident.4             The jury awarded Ms. Smack-Dixon

$250,000 in damages and awarded Mr. Dixon $25,000 in damages.5

        (5)      Wal-Mart filed a timely motion for a new trial, and Plaintiffs answered

shortly thereafter.

        (6)      Upon Rule 59 motion for a new trial, “[t]he jury’s verdict is presumed

to be correct,”6 though the Court may “order a new trial when the jury’s verdict is

2
    Smack-Dixon v. Wal-Mart, Inc., 2021 WL 3012056, at *1 (Del. Super. Ct. July 16, 2021).
3
    Id. at *7.
4
    Verdict Form, at 34-35, Dec. 6, 2022 (D.I. 81).
5
    Id. at 36.
6
   Galindez v. Narragansett Housing Assocs., L.P., 2006 WL 3457628, at *1 (Del. Super. Ct.
Nov. 28, 2006) (“The standard of review on a motion for new trial is well-settled.”); Kelly v.
McHaddon, 2002 WL 388120, at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. Mar. 4, 2002) (same).

                                               -2-
tainted by legal error committed by the trial court before or during the trial.”7 When

considering a motion for a new trial, the Court ascribes “enormous deference” to the

jury’s verdict and to the jury’s role as the ultimate finder of fact.8 “Thus, the Court

will not disturb a jury’s verdict unless ‘the evidence preponderates so heavily against

the jury verdict that a reasonable jury could not have reached the result.’”9

        (7)     Wal-Mart’s motion for a new trial effectively seeks a re-argument of

the Court’s earlier decision denying its motion in limine to exclude certain proffered

testimony by Dr. Theodore.10 Specifically, Wal-Mart asserts Dr. Theodore was “not

competent” “to provide the necessary causal bridge between the accident and [Mrs.

Smack-Dixon’s] alleged hip injuries.”11

        (8)     Wal-Mart relies on a single Delaware Supreme Court case—Peters v.

Gelb12—to support its position that Dr. Theodore’s hip-injury testimony should have

been excluded.

        (9)     This Court’s decision13 that was affirmed in Gelb is helpful but

7
   Gillen v. Cont’l Power Corp., 2014 WL 1347491, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 7, 2014) (citation
omitted).
8
     Crist v. Connor, 2007 WL 2473322, at *1 (Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 31, 2007) (citation omitted).
9
    Balderson v. Freeman, 2007 WL 1378343, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. May 9, 2007) (quoting
Storey v. Camper, 401 A.2d 458, 465 (Del. 1979)).
10
    Wal-Mart only seeks “a new trial on the issue of damages.” Wal-Mart’s Mot. for New Trial ¶
10, Dec. 19, 2022 (D.I. 82).
11
     Id. ¶ 8 (“Dr. Theodore was not competent to address the contested hip issues.”).
12
     Id. ¶ 9 (citing 314 A.2d 901 (Del. 1973)).
13
     Peters v. Gelb, 303 A.2d 685 (Del. Super. Ct. 1973), aff’d, 314 A.2d 901 (1973).

                                                  -3-
distinguishable here. In the underlying Gelb decision, this Court found that in the

preceding fifteen to twenty years the “body of knowledge concerning the results of

vasectomy procedures” had changed, yet the testifying expert “had not maintained a

study in recent years of the developments in the field.”14 And because he “lacked

the current expertise which is required of one who is called upon to express a

professional opinion concerning probable causation of unfavorable results following

[such] surgical procedure” he was unqualified to provide the proffered testimony.15

           (10) That is not the case here. As the Court previously found in its decision

denying Wal-Mart’s motion in limine, “Dr. Theodore stated he has diagnosed

Mrs. Smack-Dixon’s specific hip issue—trochanteric bursitis—in patients before.”16

“He was able to explain the symptoms and give a description of the procedure

Dr. Hornstein performed on Mrs. Smack-Dixon.”17 And his “competency in this

particular case is further supported by his review of over 1,900 pages of Mrs. Smack-

Dixon’s pre- and post-injury medical records; this includes Dr. Hornstein’s office

and operative notes, which Dr. Theodore relied upon in forming his hip causation

opinion.”18

14
     Id. at 688 (citation omitted).
15
     Id.
16
     Smack-Dixon, 2021 WL 3012056, at *4.
17
     Id.
18
     Id.

                                            -4-
        (11) In its present motion, Wal-Mart insists Dr. Theodore cannot be

considered a competent expert on the hip injury complained-of, because, in his

practice, he refers patients with such maladies to hip specialists.19 But that does not

diminish his own ability to provide hip-relevant expert testimony.20 As the Court

found on Wal-Mart’s motion in limine, Dr. Theodore has the “‘knowledge, skill,

experience, training, or education’ necessary to give an expert opinion on Mrs.

Smack-Dixon’s hip injuries despite his own now-specialized surgical practice

concentrating on the spine.”21

        (12) The Court’s refusal to limit Dr. Theodore’s expert medical testimony

was not a legal error and thus the admission of that testimony could not have tainted

the jury’s verdict such that a new trial would be required.

        (13) For the reasons stated above, Wal-Mart’s motion for a new trial is

DENIED.

                                          SO ORDERED this 25th day of January, 2023.

                                                            _
                                                                Paul R. Wallace, Judge
Original to Prothonotary
cc: All counsel via File & Serve

19
     Wal-Mart’s Mot. for New Trial ¶ 5.
20
    Smack-Dixon, 2021 WL 3012056, at *4 (finding Dr. Theodore qualified to opine on causation
after noting “from a diagnostic standpoint, [Dr. Theodore] identifies hip problems all the time and
refers those patients out to hip surgeons for further care”).
21
     Id. (citing D.R.E. 702).

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