Court Opinion

ID: 8210273
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-29 15:11:24.890348+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:41:48.952519
License: Public Domain

[J-22-2022]
                   IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                               MIDDLE DISTRICT

 BAER, C.J., TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, JJ.

 KAREN COWHER, ADMINISTRATRIX OF               :   No. 77 MAP 2021
 THE ESTATE OF JAMES L. COWHER, II,            :
 DECEASED,                                     :   Appeal from the Order of the
                                               :   Superior Court at No. 1111 EDA
                     Appellant                 :   2020 dated February 8, 2021,
                                               :   reconsideration denied April 16,
                                               :   2021, Affirming in Part and Vacating
              v.                               :   in Part the Judgment of the Lehigh
                                               :   County Court of Common Pleas,
                                               :   Civil Division, at No. 2018-C-0264,
 SOBHAN KODALI, M.D., ST. LUKE'S               :   entered April 7, 2020 and
 UNIVERSITY HEALTH NETWORK AND                 :   Remanding for a new trial.
 ST. LUKE'S CARDIOLOGY ASSOCIATES,             :
                                               :   ARGUED: April 12, 2022
                     Appellees                 :

                                       OPINION

JUSTICE DOUGHERTY                                      DECIDED: September 29, 2022

      The jury in this medical malpractice case awarded the plaintiff Karen Cowher a

lump sum amount of damages under the Survival Act, 42 Pa.C.S. §8302, and did not

itemize the amount of pain and suffering damages or other components of its aggregate

award. Thereafter, the Superior Court granted the defendants Dr. Sobhan Kodali, St.

Luke’s University Health Network, and St. Luke’s Cardiology Associates (defendants) a

new trial on survival damages based on their claim the admission of plaintiff’s expert

opinion testimony on pain and suffering was erroneous. The narrow question we address

in this appeal is whether defendants waived their right to a new trial under the general

verdict rule. This rule applies and mandates waiver when a general verdict rests upon
both valid and invalid grounds, and the litigant challenging the verdict failed to request a

special verdict slip that would have clarified the basis for the verdict. As detailed below,

these are the circumstances here. Accordingly, we hold defendants waived a new trial

under the general verdict rule and reverse the Superior Court’s order for a new trial.

                                             I.

       In December of 2015, James L. Cowher, II (decedent), experienced chest pain that

woke him from his sleep.        He sought medical attention and underwent a stress

echocardiogram test, the results of which were normal. Subsequently, on July 11, 2016,

decedent saw his primary care doctor with complaints of ongoing chest pain, as well as

shortness of breath, nausea, and sweating. The doctor performed an electrocardiogram

test and ordered decedent’s blood tested for troponin, a heart muscle enzyme released

into the bloodstream when there is heart damage. The results of both tests were normal.

Decedent’s primary care doctor referred him to St. Luke’s Cardiology Associates.

       Dr. Kodali, a general cardiologist with St. Luke’s Cardiology Associates, saw

decedent on July 13, 2016. Decedent told Dr. Kodali that for the last six months he had

been experiencing chest pains radiating to both arms, which were often associated with

shortness of breath, dizziness, and tingling in his fingers. He also told the doctor he was

running three miles every other day at a nine-minutes-per-mile pace without any

symptoms. Dr. Kodali knew decedent had three risk factors for heart disease: a family

history of premature coronary artery disease, high cholesterol, and obesity. Dr. Kodali

concluded decedent’s issues were not cardiac related, further evaluation was

unnecessary, and his clinical picture was suggestive of anxiety/panic attacks.

                                      [J-22-2022] - 2
       On August 23, 2016, decedent was running in his neighborhood when he collapsed

in front of a neighbor. He was subsequently transported to the hospital, where he was

pronounced dead. He was forty-eight years old. An autopsy revealed he had severe

atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The coroner reported his primary cause of death

to be acute myocardial infarction.

       On January 31, 2018, plaintiff, who is decedent’s widow and the administrator of

his estate, filed suit against defendants. Her complaint raised causes of action under the

Wrongful Death Act and the Survival Act,1 set to be tried before a jury. On October 28,

2019, defendants filed in the trial court a proposed verdict slip for the jury. They proposed

the following question with respect to damages:

       Question 3:

       State the amount of damages sustained by Plaintiff as a result of the
       negligence of the health-care provider(s):

              Wrongful Death Action                             $_______________

              Survival Action                                   $_______________

1 We recently explained the distinction between wrongful death and survival actions as
follows:
       A survival action under 42 Pa.C.S. §8302 is brought by the administrator or
       executor of a decedent’s estate in order to recover damages for the
       decedent’s pain and suffering, the loss of gross earning power from the time
       of injury to death, and the loss of earning power, less personal maintenance
       expenses, for the estimated working life span of the decedent. . . . By
       contrast, a wrongful death[ ] action pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. §8301 is
       designed to compensate the spouse, children, and parents of the deceased
       for the pecuniary loss they have sustained as a result of the decedent’s
       death, and damages may include the present value of services that would
       have been rendered to the family had the decedent lived, as well as funeral
       and medical expenses.
McMichael v. McMichael, 241 A.3d 582, 587-88 (Pa. 2020).

                                      [J-22-2022] - 3
Proposed Verdict Slip of Defendants at 2 (filed 10/28/19).

        On November 7, 2019, defendants filed a motion in limine to preclude plaintiff from

introducing any evidence at trial regarding decedent’s pain and suffering. Defendants

argued “[t]estimony from the neighbors about pain and suffering would constitute a

speculative lay opinion that is unreliable and not able to provide an appropriate basis for

a jury to find there was pain and suffering[,]” and plaintiff’s “sole expert does not offer a

sufficient opinion on the subject and cannot testify outside the four corners of his expert

report.” Memorandum of Law in Support of the Motion in Limine of Defendants, Sobhan

Kodali, M.D., St. Luke’s University Health Network, and St. Luke’s Cardiology Associates,

to Preclude Plaintiff from Offering Any Evidence or Testimony Regarding Decedent’s Pain

and Suffering at 3 (filed 11/7/19). The trial court denied the motion.

       At the pretrial conference on December 2, 2019, the parties and the trial court

discussed the verdict slip. See N.T. 12/2/19 at 20-22. Defendants argued the damages

question should have two blanks, one for the jurors to supply an amount for the wrongful

death action and the other for them to provide an amount for the survival action, as

indicated on their previously submitted verdict slip. The court agreed. See id. at 22 (“Mr.

Zolfaghari: It’s the Wrongful Death Act and the Survival Act. The Court: Right. . . .The

Court: I think Mr. Zolfaghari is right, they just get the two, but that sounds right.”).

       At trial, the neighbor who witnessed decedent collapse while on a run, Diana

Kanowski, testified she was walking her dogs when she saw decedent approaching her.

She recounted he was walking at a “really slow” pace, which was atypical for him, and as

she got closer to him, he went down on one knee. N.T. 12/3/19 at 74. Kanowski recalled

she jokingly asked him whether he was taking a break, and he answered “No,” and stated,

                                        [J-22-2022] - 4
“I need help.” Id. She testified decedent went down on two knees, then on to his side,

and then finally on to his back and passed out.         See id. at 74-78.     She stated

approximately three minutes elapsed between when she first saw decedent and when he

lost consciousness, and during this time he was in pain, breathing heavily, and very

distraught. See id.

      Based on Kanowski’s testimony, plaintiff’s expert in cardiology, invasive

cardiology, and internal medicine, Dr. Emil Hayek, offered the opinion decedent

experienced pain and suffering prior to his death:

      Q. In addition to the other opinions that you’ve given today, do you have an
      opinion regarding whether Mr. Cowher experienced pain and suffering prior
      to his death?

      A. Yes.

      Q. And what is that opinion and what’s it based on?

      A. That, based on the testimony I heard earlier this morning, I believe he
      did suffer conscious pain and suffering on that run on August 23rd when he
      realized that something was very wrong before he became unconscious.

N.T. 12/3/19 at 221.

      Plaintiff’s expert in actuarial economics, David Hopkins, opined the total economic

loss stemming from decedent’s death ranged from $1,070,145 to $2,700,498. See N.T.

12/4/19 at 59.

      Upon the conclusion of the presentation of evidence, the trial court provided the

parties with a copy of the verdict slip to review. Defendants suggested the reference to

“the Plaintiff” in question 2, which concerned causation, should be replaced with the name

of decedent, and the court and plaintiff agreed to the change. Otherwise, defendants

voiced no objection to the slip. See N.T. 12/6/19 (Afternoon Session) at 55-56. The court

                                     [J-22-2022] - 5
and parties then turned to discussion of the parties’ proposed points for charge.

Defendants agreed the jury should be instructed that past non-economic damages under

the Survival Act include damages for pain and suffering. See id. at 74, 101.

       On December 9, 2019, in its closing instructions to the jury, the trial court

instructed the jurors there were four components of survival damages, specifically, pain

and suffering, loss of life’s pleasures, past lost earnings, and future lost earnings:

               So under the Survival Act, the Plaintiff is entitled to be compensated
       for the following damages. And there are three components to this as well.
       First, we’re going to talk about past noneconomic damages.

               The Plaintiff is entitled to be awarded an amount that you believe will
       fairly and adequately compensate for the mental and physical pain,
       suffering and inconvenience and loss of life’s pleasures that James Cowher
       endured from the moment of his injury to the moment of his death as a result
       of this incident. There are two items that make up a damage award for
       noneconomic loss: 1. Pain and suffering and 2. Loss of ability to enjoy the
       pleasures of life. First, the Plaintiff, on behalf of James Cowher’s estate, is
       entitled to be fairly and adequately compensated for all physical pain,
       mental anguish, discomfort, inconvenience and distress that you find that
       the Decedent – that James Cowher endured from the time of the injury until
       his death. Second, the Plaintiff on behalf of James Cowher’s estate is
       entitled to be fairly and adequately compensated for James Cowher’s loss
       of his ability to enjoy any of the pleasures of life as a result of the injury, as
       a result of the injuries from the time of those injuries until the time of his
       death.

              The second one is past lost earnings. The Plaintiff is entitled to be
       awarded the total net amount that James Cowher would have earned
       between the date of his death and today. Net earnings are decided as
       follows: You must first calculate the total amounts of the [sic] James
       Cowher’s gross earnings, including fringe benefits, between the date of his
       death and today and from this amount you must deduct the amount of
       monetary contributions he would have made to his spouse during this period
       which you may have already awarded to the Plaintiff under the Wrongful
       Death Act.

               Now, the third component would be future loss of earnings. The
       Plaintiff is entitled to be awarded the value of the net amount that James’s
       [sic] Cowher would have earned between today and the end of his life
       expectancy. Again, net earnings for this period are decided as follows: You

                                       [J-22-2022] - 6
       must first calculate the total amount of James Cowher’s gross earnings
       between today and the end of his life expectancy and from this amount you
       must deduct the amount of monetary contributions he would have made to
       his family during this period which you have already, may have already
       awarded under the Wrongful Death Act. Your award to the Estate for total
       lost future net earnings, thus, represents the total net earnings over James
       Cowher’s work life expectancy. Now to decide James Cowher’s gross
       earnings between today and the end of his life expectancy, you must decide
       the total amount James Cowher would have earned during his life if he had
       not died.

               In deciding the sum awarded for future loss of earnings you must
       consider the evidence that has been presented to you concerning the effect
       of productivity and inflation on the amount of this loss. You should consider
       the following – I’m going to give you about 6 or 7 things here: 1. James
       Cowher’s age, educational and work experience; 2. His physical condition
       before the injury and death; 3. The work that James Cowher had done in
       the past and was capable of doing; 4. The work that James Cowher would
       have been doing in the future had the injury and death not occurred; 5. The
       effect increases in productivity have on the amount of this loss; 6. The effect
       inflation will have on the amount of this loss; and 7. Any other matters in
       evidence that you find to be relevant to this determination.

              After you have decided James Cowher’s loss of future earnings, this
       sum must be reduced to present value. You should consider and evaluate
       the expert testimony that you have heard, concerning reduction to present
       value based upon a reasonably secure fixed income investment.

N.T. 12/9/19 at 144-47.

       The court also instructed the jurors to provide one lump sum amount of survival

damages and a single lump sum amount of wrongful death damages:

       The sum of money awarded for future loss of earnings shall be recorded as
       a single amount and you would take all of these items together, the three
       components and combine them, to the survival line. All right? So the two
       lines, three components under wrongful death that you would decide would
       be funneled into that line and the three on the survival would be funneled
       into the survival line.

Id. at 147-48.

       Later that day, the jury returned a unanimous verdict in favor of plaintiff. The jury

found Dr. Kodali’s conduct fell below the applicable standard of medical care, and his

                                      [J-22-2022] - 7
negligence was a factual cause of harm to decedent. See id. at 168. In addition, the

jurors awarded plaintiff $2,457,000 in wrongful death damages and $3,833,000 in survival

damages. See id. at 169. The damages were reflected in the verdict slip as follows:

       Question 3:

       State the amount of damages sustained by the Plaintiff as a result of the
       negligence of the Defendant, Sobhan Kodali, M.D.

                            Wrongful Death                             $   2,457,000

                            Survival                                   $   3,833,000

Verdict Slip at 2 (filed 12/11/19). Defendants declined the court’s offer to review the

verdict slip but did request the jury be polled, and each juror confirmed they agreed with

the verdict as stated. N.T. 12/9/19 at 169-70. Defendants did not ask the trial court to

require the jury to itemize or otherwise clarify its damages awards.

       Defendants appealed to the Superior Court. In pertinent part, defendants argued

the admission of the expert opinion testimony of plaintiff’s expert, Dr. Hayek, regarding

decedent’s pain and suffering was erroneous and required a new trial on damages. The

panel agreed. Initially, the panel held “the testimony was nothing more than the expert’s

personal opinion and was not admissible expert testimony.” Cowher v. Kodali, 249 A.3d

1134, at *7 (Pa. Super. 2021) (unpublished table decision). In addition, the panel held

the error was prejudicial. Specifically, the panel reasoned expert testimony tends to be

viewed by jurors as more credible than lay testimony. Also, the panel determined it was

“clear from the verdict that the jury awarded [p]laintiff a high amount of pain and suffering

damages, even though the evidence showed that [d]ecedent was conscious for only

approximately three minutes.” Id. In this regard, the panel noted “the highest amount of

economic damages to which the [plaintiff’s] economic expert testified was $2,700,498[,]”

                                       [J-22-2022] - 8
and “[t]he jury’s survival award was $3,833,000, $1,132,502 more than [p]laintiff’s

evidence of economic damages.” Id.

       The panel rejected plaintiff’s argument prejudice could not be determined because

“[d]efendants did not request an itemized verdict sheet” showing “the precise amount of

the jury’s pain and suffering award.” Id. at *8. The panel reasoned that “[w]hile [the]

absence of an itemization of damages can affect a court’s ability to review a challenge to

the amount that a jury awarded for a particular item of damages, . . . the issue here is

whether the improper admission of evidence was prejudicial, not whether the amount of

the pain and suffering award was excessive or unsupported.” Id., citing Birth Center v.

St. Paul Cos., Inc., 727 A.2d 1144, 1163 & n.16 (Pa. Super. 1999), aff’d, 787 A.2d 376

(Pa. 2001). “The standard for whether [an] error is prejudicial,” the panel ruled, “is

whether it could have affected the verdict[,] [and] [t]he ability to ascertain the precise

amount of the jury’s pain and suffering award is unnecessary to that analysis.” Id.

(emphasis in original). In the panel’s view, “[t]he fact that the damages verdict that

included pain and suffering was over $1 million more than [p]laintiff’s expert’s highest

calculation of economic damages [wa]s sufficient for the [panel] to conclude that this

verdict could have been affected, even if an actual amount of pain and suffering damages

cannot be determined.” Id. The panel concluded: “Given the fact that the jury awarded

a high amount of pain and suffering damages for a brief period of time coupled with the

undue weight that jurors are likely to give to expert testimony, we conclude the admission

of [p]laintiff’s cardiology expert’s opinion on pain and suffering was prejudicial error.” Id.

       The panel further concluded that the trial court’s prejudicial error in admitting the

expert testimony on pain and suffering could not have affected the jury’s liability verdict

                                       [J-22-2022] - 9
or damages award for the wrongful death action, but rather could have only affected the

damages awarded on the survival claim. Accordingly, the panel “vacate[d] only the

damages judgment with respect to [p]laintiff’s survival claim and remand[ed] for a new

trial on damages limited to that claim.” Id.2

                                                II.

       This Court granted plaintiff’s petition for allowance of appeal, limited to the

following single issue as stated by plaintiff: “Where, as here, [defendants] failed to request

an itemized verdict slip such that the jury would have been required to separately value

the amount of each element of damages under Pennsylvania’s Survival Act and where

[defendants] failed to object to the general verdict slip given by the [t]rial [c]ourt to the jury

2In addition to their claim regarding Dr. Hayek, which was defendants’ second issue on
appeal, defendants raised three other issues in the Superior Court:
       1. Whether the trial court erred and abused its discretion in failing to vacate
       the verdict where [p]laintiff failed to prove liability under her new, eleventh-
       hour cause of death theory by presenting expert testimony identifying a
       specific standard of care for treatment of cardiac arrythmia (as opposed to
       other coronary conditions), which [d]efendants breached and thus caused
       [p]laintiff’s harm? . . .
       3. Whether the trial court erred and abused its discretion in failing to vacate
       the Survival Act award where the record is devoid of evidence that decedent
       was conscious, able to feel pain or indeed felt pain immediately prior to
       death and, thus, any award for pain and suffering is against the weight of
       the evidence?
       4. Whether the trial court erred and/or abused its discretion in denying
       [d]efendants’ requests for a new trial on damages and/or remittitur, where
       the jury’s Survival Act verdict award of $377,000 per minute (at best) for 2-
       3 minutes of pain and suffering is grossly excessive, unmoored from the
       record, and against the weight of the evidence?
Cowher, 249 A.3d 1134, at *3, quoting Appellants’ Brief at 5-6. The Superior Court
rejected the first issue on the merits. See id. at 3-5. With respect to defendants’ third
and fourth issues, the panel held that in light of its disposition of the claim concerning Dr.
Hayek, “we need not and do not address these claims of error.” Id. at *9.

                                        [J-22-2022] - 10
to answer during deliberations, knowing that they intended to challenge any pain and

suffering award rendered by the jury, whether those same [defendants] are estopped from

requesting and receiving or have waived a new trial on damages?” Cowher v. Kodali,

265 A.3d 198 (Pa. 2021). “The issue of whether a party’s conduct results in waiver of an

issue is a question of law; accordingly, our standard of review is de novo and our scope

of review is plenary.” Shiflett v. Lehigh Valley Health Network, Inc., 217 A.3d 225, 232

(Pa. 2019).

       Plaintiff argues the general verdict rule announced by this Court in Halper v. Jewish

Family & Children’s Service, 963 A.2d 1282 (Pa. 2009), and endorsed in Shiflett, bars a

new trial on damages under the Survival Act. She contends the general verdict rule “has

as its centerpiece the logical and equitable principle that [if] a defendant fails to request

a verdict slip include a special interrogatory and the resulting verdict against the

defendant is unclear in some way, that lack of clarity cannot form the basis of the verdict

loser’s request for a new trial.” Appellant’s Brief at 46. “In other words,” according to

plaintiff, the fundamental principle undergirding the general verdict rule is that “the verdict

loser cannot benefit from its own mistake or strategic decision.” Id. She insists the notion

that the “general verdict rule applies only to issues of liability decided by the jury is

unsupported by the equitable reasoning that lies at the rule’s core.” Id. at 47.

       Plaintiff relies on Birth Center, which involved an action by an insured against a

professional liability insurer for bad faith refusal to settle a medical malpractice case. See

id. at 48. There, in addressing defendant St. Paul’s issue on cross-appeal that plaintiff

Birth Center’s claim for lost profits was too speculative, the Superior Court noted:

       [b]y failing to request a more structured verdict slip, St. Paul did not inform
       the trial court or the jury, at a time when it could easily have been corrected,

                                      [J-22-2022] - 11
       that St. Paul was interested in partitioning or apportioning the award for later
       challenge. Although not waiver in a technical sense, the absence of special
       interrogatories has thwarted our review of this issue.

Birth Center, 727 A.2d at 1163 n.16. Ultimately, the Superior Court saw “no reason to

disturb the jury’s determination[,]” and “reinstate[d] the full verdict in favor of Birth Center.”

Id. at 1163.

       Plaintiff also relies on Krock v. Chroust, 478 A.2d 1376 (Pa. Super. 1984). See

Appellant’s Brief at 48-50. In that case, the trial court granted the defendant’s motion to

mold a jury award of $100,000 in a survival action by reducing it by $15,000, the maximum

work loss benefits recoverable under the No-fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act.                 In

decreasing the verdict, “the trial judge assumed that (1) the jury intended to compensate

[the plaintiff] for economic detriment, and (2) the jury awarded at least $15,000 in that

regard.” Krock, 478 A.2d at 1381. The Superior Court held that “[n]either of these

assumptions can be legitimately surmised from a general verdict.” Id. Further, the

Superior Court ruled the defendant “could have easily received the answers which the

trial judge was forced to presume by submitting points for charge requesting that the jury

return special findings.” Id. But because the defendant failed to raise the issue of the

jury’s specific finding regarding work loss, the Superior Court concluded the defendant

“waived his right to seek a cure to an inflated verdict through a motion to mold.” Id.

Accordingly, the Krock Court vacated the amended verdict and reinstated the original

verdict of $100,000. See id.

       Alternatively, plaintiff asserts that even if the general verdict rule does not extend

to this case, the Superior Court’s order should be reversed and the trial court’s judgment

reinstated in full under “this Court’s strict waiver jurisprudence.” Appellant’s Brief at 46.

                                        [J-22-2022] - 12
She maintains defendants “fail[ed] to contemporaneously object” to the pain and suffering

testimony of her neighbor and expert, “failed to request any form of clarifying questions

on the verdict slip[,] . . . agreed to and did not object to the jury charge . . . instructing the

jury on the components of damages, including pain and suffering[,]” and “did not ask the

[t]rial [c]ourt to request that the jury clarify its verdict by itemizing the damages.” Id. at 54-

55. Under these circumstances, plaintiff argues, “[d]efendants either inadvertently waived

their right to a new trial based upon the amount of the jury’s alleged pain and suffering

award or did so affirmatively.” Id. at 55.3

       Defendants respond that the Superior Court applied the correct test for assessing

whether the erroneous admission of Dr. Hayek’s expert opinion testimony on pain and

suffering was prejudicial, namely whether the error could have affected the verdict. They

assert “no Pennsylvania court has ever required a party to establish with mathematical

certainty the effect improper inclusion of evidence had on a case.” Appellees’ Brief at 16.

In addition, defendants argue the panel correctly concluded they were prejudiced by the

erroneous expert opinion testimony under this “could-have-affected-the-verdict” standard.

3 Amicus The Pennsylvania Association for Justice (Association) endorses plaintiff’s
position the Superior Court erred. Association argues defendants’ failure to request a
verdict sheet with special interrogatories on individualized damages prevented them from
proving prejudice resulting from the erroneous expert testimony on pain and suffering. In
the absence of special interrogatories, Association maintains, “[d]efendants cannot prove
anything about the pain and suffering award – even whether an award was made for pain
and suffering.” Association’s Amicus Brief at 2. Like plaintiff, Association contends
reversal is supported by this Court’s decisions in Shiflett and Halper, as well as the
Superior Court’s opinion in Birth Center. See id. at 2-4. Association posits “‘waiver’ does
not necessarily describe [d]efendants’ failure in this case.” Id. at 4. Rather than failing to
preserve an error for appellate review, Association asserts, defendants failed to take the
necessary steps to demonstrate prejudice justifying a new trial. Association alleges that
having made the choice to not seek special interrogatories for each element of Survival
Act damages, defendants must now “live with” the consequences, and concluding
otherwise would be tantamount to letting them “have their cake and eat it, too.” Id. at 6.

                                        [J-22-2022] - 13
In this respect, they note juries usually place great weight on expert testimony, plaintiff’s

counsel referenced the testimony in his closing argument, and the testimony was

unrebutted. See id. at 17-20. They also emphasize the total damages awarded on

plaintiff’s survival action exceeded her expert’s highest estimate of economic harm by

$1,133,000. According to defendants, “the magnitude of the award, returned shortly after

[p]laintiff’s counsel’s closing where he emphasized Dr. Hayek’s testimony on pain and

suffering, firmly establishes the effect his testimony had on the jury.”          Id. at 22.

Defendants insist they did not waive their right to claim prejudice because they

“vehemently objected to the expert testimony pre-trial but, after a lengthy sidebar

discussion . . . , the trial court overruled defense counsel’s objections.” Id. Indeed, they

maintain plaintiff’s waiver claim “has itself been waived” because it was only first raised

in her petition for allowance of appeal to this Court. Id. at 23.

       Defendants dispute plaintiff’s contention the general verdict rule applies to this

case. In their view, Shiflett and Halper “have no relevance here” because they “involved

situations where plaintiffs asserted separate theories or claims, one of which was later

found to be invalid, [and] the respective juries returned lump sum verdicts.” Id. at 24.

Here, on the other hand, defendants argue, “the jury awarded two separate verdicts (one

for Wrongful Death and one under the Survival Act) and the Superior Court did not find

that one of two different theories should not have been submitted to the jury.” Id. at 25.

Defendants see “[n]othing in Shiflett or Halper suggest[ing] that their holdings apply with

equal force to cases involving erroneous evidentiary rulings[.]” Id. Defendants argue that

since “[p]laintiff has argued that admission of Dr. Hayek’s testimony was ‘harmless error’

in light of Mrs. Kanowski’s testimony[,] . . . as a practical matter, even if the wages and

                                      [J-22-2022] - 14
pain and suffering portions of the Survival Act verdict had been separately awarded,

[p]laintiff likely would have argued that [d]efendants waived the issue unless they were

able to prove which portion of the pain and suffering award was based on the expert’s (as

opposed to the neighbor’s) testimony.” Id. (emphasis omitted).

       Defendants further contend Pennsylvania’s Suggested Standard Civil Jury

Instructions call for damages under the Wrongful Death Act and Survival Act to be

awarded in two lump-sum amounts. See id. at 26, citing Pa. Suggested Standard Jury

Instructions (Civil) 7.190, 14.170.     And, they allege this Court has in fact “required

wrongful death and survival awards to be rendered in lump sum amounts.” Id., citing

Ferne v. Chadderton, 69 A.2d 104 (Pa. 1949). Defendants assert plaintiff’s reliance on

Birth Center is “misplaced” because that case “did not involve wrongful death or survival

claims, and did not require that damages for such claims be itemized.”               Id. at 28.

Defendants insist Birth Center, as well as the Superior Court’s earlier decision in Krock,

are distinguishable because unlike in those cases, the disputed jury award in this case is

readily discernible from the record.

       Defendants also raise several policy objections to plaintiff’s position they forfeited

their right to a new trial on survival damages. First, they maintain the rule urged by plaintiff

would apply to defendants only, which would be fundamentally unfair and arbitrary and

capricious, and would implicate equal protection concerns. Second, defendants assert

plaintiff’s proposed rule would apply only where improper evidence has been introduced,

not excluded. Third, defendants argue, denying them a new trial because they did not

request itemization of the survival damages would “effect a retroactive change in the law”

in contravention of their due process rights. Id. at 31.

                                       [J-22-2022] - 15
       Finally, defendants argue in the alternative that if this Court decides to adopt a rule

of estoppel or waiver in this context, it should do so prospectively only. They maintain

applying the “new” rule retroactively would not serve its purpose, there has been

substantial reliance on the “old” rule, and retroactive application of the “new” rule to their

case “will require [them] to lose their property interest in having almost $4 million of the

verdict set aside.” Id. at 34.4

4  Amici The American Medical Association and The Pennsylvania Medical Society
(AMA/PMS) support defendants’ arguments for affirmance. AMA/PMS contend that “as
in Brady v. Urbas, 111 A.3d 1155, 1164 (Pa. 2015), this Court should continue to hold
that improper expert testimony requires a new trial whenever it reasonably appears that
the testimony influenced the verdict.” AMA/PMS’s Amici Brief at 9. They assert this
prejudice standard is satisfied here because the maximum amount of economic loss
estimated by plaintiff’s own expert was $2,700,498, yet the total survival award was
$3,833,000. Under these circumstances, and given that pain and suffering was the “only
other item of survival damages,” amici claim it is “obvious, logical, and not at all
speculative” to conclude “$1.1 million is the minimum the jury awarded for pain and
suffering.” Id. at 11 (emphasis omitted). On the other hand, they maintain, it is “clearly
unreasonable” to conclude the jury ignored plaintiff’s economic expert and awarded
damages in excess of his high-end estimate. Id. They insist this Court rejected such an
argument in Kiser v. Schulte, 648 A.2d 1 (Pa. 1994), which acknowledged “a jury is free
to believe or disbelieve opinion evidence presented by an expert witness[,]” but also noted
“a jury’s verdict must bear a reasonable resemblance to the proven damages.”
AMA/PMS’s Amici Brief at 11, quoting Kiser, 648 A.2d at 5-6 (emphasis omitted).
AMA/PMS argue plaintiff waived reliance on the general verdict rule by failing to reference
it below, and the rule is inapplicable in any event because this case does not involve a
scenario of two separate theories of relief, one valid and the other invalid, and a lump
sum verdict that makes it impossible to determine the jury awarded any damages on the
invalid theory. Echoing defendants, amici argue “settled Pennsylvania practice and legal
authorities” provide for wrongful death and survival awards in lump-sum amounts and
therefore, “even if this Court ultimately determines that survival awards must be itemized
in certain circumstances, the requirement should be deemed prospective so the lower
courts and bar are given fair notice and the jury instruction committee can modify the
standard instructions and verdict sheet.” Id. at 16, 18. Amici further assert Birth Center
is inapposite because it did not involve wrongful death or survival claims, and “rejected
the claim that appellant waived its challenge to a particular item of damages[.]” Id. at 19
(emphasis omitted). They also argue Krock is distinguishable because the jury’s award
of damages for pain and suffering here “is easily discernible and need not be assumed.”
Id. at 20. Finally, AMA/PMS contend plaintiff’s waiver argument is itself waived. In any

                                      [J-22-2022] - 16
       In reply, plaintiff emphasizes this Court’s review is limited to the single issue on

which it granted allowance of appeal, and does not extend to consideration of “‘why’ the

jury awarded any particular amount to” plaintiff. Appellant’s Reply Brief at 15. In addition,

she argues the jury’s verdict here was not excessive in light of Tulewicz v. Southeastern

Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, 606 A.2d 425 (Pa. 1991), on reargument, 606

A.2d 427 (Pa. 1992), where this Court held a verdict of $2,500,000 under the Wrongful

Death Act was not excessive notwithstanding “[t]he plaintiff’s expert testified that

$356,929.00 was the value of lost earning capacity, past and future home services and

the loss of guidance, tutelage and general upbringing of her daughter.” Tulewicz, 606

A.2d at 426. See Appellant’s Reply Brief at 18-19. Lastly, plaintiff posits a “third option”

to either affirming or reversing the Superior Court’s remand for a new trial on survival

damages. In particular, she claims “[d]efendants concede that fully $2,700,000 worth of

the survival award was based upon the economic damages component of that award.”

Id. at 21. Since this portion of the survival award is “undisputed[,]” plaintiff argues, “this

Court could confirm a portion of the [t]rial [c]ourt’s judgment totaling $5,157,000 [the

$2,457,000 awarded under the Wrongful Death Act plus the $2,700,000 of economic

damages under the Survival Act,] and remand for a new trial [on] the total amount of

damages attributable to Mr. Cowher’s pain and suffering component of the Survival Act

claim.” Id. at 22.

case, they argue, since “the prevailing authorities do not clearly contain any requirement
of itemized survival awards[,]” and “actually require or at least strongly suggest the
opposite[,]” it would be “improper and unfair” to enforce waiver here. Id. at 22 (emphasis
omitted). Amici emphasize defendants objected to Dr. Hayek’s testimony before and
during trial, and “the facts of this case do not warrant the heavy consequences of waiver.”
Id. at 25.

                                      [J-22-2022] - 17
                                             III.

       Upon careful consideration of the arguments of the parties and amici, the

governing law, and the record, we hold defendants waived a new trial on survival

damages under the general verdict rule. This rule provides: “‘when the jury returns a

general verdict involving two or more issues and its verdict is supported as to at least one

issue, the verdict will not be reversed on appeal.’” Shiflett, 217 A.3d at 234, quoting

Halper, 963 A.2d at 1289. Elaborating on the rule, we have stated: “‘a defendant who

fails to request a special verdict form in a civil case will be barred on appeal from

complaining that the jury may have relied on a factual theory unsupported by the evidence

when there was sufficient evidence to support another theory properly before the jury.’”

Id., quoting Halper, 963 A.2d at 1289. Thus, under the rule, when a litigant fails to request

a special verdict slip that would have clarified the basis for a general verdict, and the

verdict rests upon valid grounds, “the right to a new trial is waived.” Id. at 234 n.8. The

rule “promote[s] judicial efficiency” by preventing needless retrials as well as “fairness” by

keeping a litigant from benefiting from its own omission in failing to request a special

verdict slip. Id. The rule has been an explicit feature of Pennsylvania law since Halper

was decided in 2009.5

5 Indeed, as we noted in Shiflett, see id. at 234 n.7, the rule has roots in Superior Court
precedent predating Halper. See Connelly Containers, Inc. v. Pa. R.R., 292 A.2d 528,
532-33 (Pa. Super. 1972) (“In view of appellant’s failure to request a special verdict or
interrogatories of the jurors, the apparent relative strength of the two other theories
presented to the jury, and fact that appellee did not argue the ‘rivet’ theory to the jury, we
hold that the trial judge’s charge was not the ‘basic, fundamental and prejudicial error’
which would require the reversal of the judgment below.”), quoting Gilmore v. Marsh, 227
A.2d 881, 882 (Pa. 1967); Krock, 478 A.2d at 1381 (“Herein, the attorneys for the parties
and the trial judge discussed the work loss issue in the pre-trial conference; however, no
agreement was included in the record, nor were special interrogatories submitted to the

                                      [J-22-2022] - 18
       Here, defendants knew before the trial even started that the expert opinion

testimony of plaintiff’s expert, Dr. Hayek, regarding pain and suffering under the Survival

Act was a potential issue on appeal. They filed a pretrial motion in limine to preclude the

testimony, which the trial court denied. Nonetheless, defendants never requested in the

trial court, either before trial, at trial, or post-verdict prior to the jury’s dismissal, a special

interrogatory itemizing the Survival Act damages. In fact, prior to trial, defendants filed a

proposed verdict slip with a suggested damages question asking the jurors to supply a

single lump sum amount of damages for plaintiff’s survival action. See Proposed Verdict

Slip of Defendants at 2. In other words, defendants’ own proposed verdict slip did not

seek itemization of the damages under the survival claim. Indeed, the proposed damages

question in defendants’ suggested verdict slip was materially identical to the damages

question the trial court actually used in the verdict slip it provided to the jury at trial.

Similarly, when the parties and trial court discussed the verdict slip at the pretrial

conference, defendants affirmatively argued the form should have one blank for the jurors

to award a single lump sum amount of survival damages. See N.T. 12/2/19 at 22. Later

at trial, when the court provided the parties with a copy of the verdict slip to review,

defendants voiced no objection to the form calling for a lump sum award of damages

under the Survival Act. See N.T. 12/6/19 (Afternoon Session) at 55-56. Thereafter, the

jury to ascertain the meaning of its verdict. By failing to raise this issue either through
appropriate points for charge or objections voiced prior to the discharge of the jury,
appellee waived his right to seek a cure to an inflated verdict through a motion to mold.”);
Birth Center, 727 A.2d at 1163 n.16 (“By failing to request a more structured verdict slip,
St. Paul did not inform the trial court or the jury, at a time when it could easily have been
corrected, that St. Paul was interested in partitioning or apportioning the award for later
challenge. Although not waiver in a technical sense, the absence of special
interrogatories has thwarted our review of this issue.”).

                                        [J-22-2022] - 19
trial court instructed the jury, without objection by defendants, to award a single amount

of survival damages. See N.T. 12/9/19 at 147. When the jurors ultimately returned a

lump sum award of Survival Act damages, defendants did not request itemization or

clarification of the verdict prior to the discharge of the jury. See id. at 169-71. In sum,

despite knowing before trial even commenced that the propriety of Dr. Hayek’s testimony

was a possible appellate issue, and despite having multiple opportunities to request a

special verdict slip breaking down the amount of pain and suffering damages, defendants

never once requested a special verdict form in the trial court, and in fact affirmatively

sought a lump sum award of survival damages.

       Moreover, putting to one side and not considering Dr. Hayek’s testimony, the jury’s

general damages verdict under the Survival Act is nonetheless supported by other valid

evidence. The trial court instructed the jurors there were four distinct components of

survival damages: pain and suffering, loss of ability to enjoy the pleasures of life, past lost

earnings, and future lost earnings. See id. at 144-46. There was competent evidence

supporting the latter three components of survival damages. Thus, the jury’s survival

award may be based entirely on one or more of these valid grounds. Indeed, plaintiff’s

counsel specifically argued in summation the decedent should be “fully and fairly

compensate[d]” for the “loss of life’s pleasures.” Id. at 78. Counsel told the jurors “there’s

no measuring stick for its value. That’s up to you.” Id. Similarly, while the “most

aggressive” estimate offered by the plaintiff’s expert regarding the decedent’s lost

earnings was $2,700,498, N.T. 12/4/19 at 59, plaintiff’s counsel urged the jury to “come

to some number that you believe would be the appropriate number to award[,]” and

emphasized “we have no way to know for certain what [decedent] would have earned or

                                      [J-22-2022] - 20
what he would have done 5 years from now, 10, 15, 20.” N.T. 12/9/19 at 72. Also, the

court instructed the jury, consistently with Pennsylvania law, see Kiser, 648 A.2d at 5-6,

that they were not bound by expert opinion testimony, see N.T. 12/9/19 at 128 (“You are

not bound by an expert's opinion merely because he or she is an expert. You may accept

it or reject it as in the case of other witnesses. Give it the weight, if any, to which you

deem it entitled.”). Given this context, the general survival damages verdict returned by

the jury is supportable solely on the basis of the proper evidence of loss of life’s pleasures

and/or lost earnings.

       Furthermore, applying the general verdict rule to these facts serves the ends of

judicial efficiency and fairness undergirding the rule. A special verdict slip in this case

asking the jury to itemize the pain and suffering damages and other component parts of

the survival award would have clarified the specific amount of damages attributable to Dr.

Hayek’s testimony, obviating the need for the new trial on the totality of damages under

the Survival Act ordered by the Superior Court. On the other hand, ordering a new trial

on survival damages would grant defendants the benefit of a new trial on the full sum of

the award, and a second bite at the apple to potentially reduce their payment of damages,

based on their own failure to request a special verdict form. And, further tipping the

balance of the equities against defendants is the fact this failure occurred with their full

knowledge Dr. Hayek’s testimony was likely to be an issue on appeal.

       Under these circumstances, where defendants knew prior to trial the propriety of

Dr. Hayek’s testimony was a possible appellate issue but declined to take advantage of

multiple opportunities to request a special verdict slip clarifying the impact of this

evidence, where the survival damages verdict was supported by other valid evidentiary

                                      [J-22-2022] - 21
grounds properly before the jury, and where efficiency and fairness concerns support a

finding of waiver, we conclude defendants waived their claim to a new trial under the

general verdict rule. We will not simply presume the verdict rested on an improper basis

and remand for a retrial burdening plaintiff and expending finite judicial resources where

defendants had it readily within their power to clarify the matter via a special verdict slip.

       The arguments presented against application of the general verdict rule leave us

unpersuaded. Defendants’ contentions they were clearly prejudiced by Dr. Hayek’s pain

and suffering testimony miss the mark. The question before us is not whether the

admission of the testimony was prejudicial error.        Rather, we are deciding whether

defendants waived their challenge to the survival award under the general verdict rule by

not requesting a special verdict slip. Assuming the admission of Dr. Hayek’s testimony

was prejudicial error, this would not resolve the distinct waiver issue. A non-harmless

error can nevertheless be waived.

       We disagree with defendants and their amici that plaintiff waived reliance on the

general verdict rule by not raising it in the trial court or the Superior Court and raising it

for the first time in her allocatur petition to this Court. Plaintiff was not the moving party

in the trial court. It was defendants who filed the pretrial motion in limine to preclude

evidence of pain and suffering. Moreover, while plaintiff is the appellant in this Court, she

was the appellee in the Superior Court. Under these circumstances, plaintiff did not waive

the general verdict rule. See In re Vencil, 152 A.3d 235, 241 n.6 (Pa. 2017) (appellant

did not waive arguments where it “was the non-moving party before the trial court and

was an appellee in the Superior Court”); see also Commonwealth v. Shaffer, 209 A.3d

957, 971-72 (Pa. 2019) (“[T]hroughout this litigation, the Commonwealth was the

                                      [J-22-2022] - 22
nonmoving party or appellee and had no obligation to preserve the issue of whether the

private search doctrine applied.”).

       Also unconvincing are defendants’ and their amici’s arguments this case is

distinguishable from Halper and Shiflett because those cases involved an invalid theory

of liability whereas this one involves an erroneous evidentiary ruling. We see nothing in

Halper and Shiflett excluding the present scenario from the general verdict rule. To the

contrary, we defined the rule broadly in those cases: “when the jury returns a general

verdict involving two or more issues and its verdict is supported as to at least one issue,

the verdict will not be reversed on appeal.” Shiflett, 217 A.3d at 234; Halper, 963 A.2d at

1289 (emphasis added).        The general term “issue” encompasses the erroneous

introduction of evidence just as it includes an invalid liability theory, and much else

besides. Here, as in Halper and Shiflett, there was a general verdict supported by both

valid and allegedly invalid grounds, and the party challenging the verdict failed to request

a special verdict slip clarifying whether the verdict in fact rested on the claimed improper

basis. These facts in common require a consistent result: waiver under the general

verdict rule.

       We further reject defendants’ suggestion that because the neighbor Kanowski also

testified regarding pain and suffering, a special verdict slip itemizing pain and suffering

damages – and the other permissible survival damages – would not have clarified that

the jury’s survival award was based on Dr. Hayek’s opinion testimony. As defendants

themselves emphasize, expert opinion testimony typically carries special weight with the

jury, Dr. Hayek’s testimony about pain and suffering went unrebutted, and plaintiff’s

counsel emphasized the expert’s testimony in summation; the jury’s specification of an

                                      [J-22-2022] - 23
amount for pain and suffering in response to a special interrogatory would have clearly

indicated the expert testimony impacted the verdict, as unchallenged expert testimony

would surely have played at least some role in any hypothetical pain and suffering award.

As it stands, however, in the absence of a request for a special verdict slip, it is unclear

even whether the jury awarded pain and suffering damages in response to Question 3,

and therefore it is nothing more than rank speculation to assume the general verdict was

premised on Dr. Hayek’s testimony, as opposed to being exclusively based on the proper

evidence of loss of life’s pleasures and/or lost earnings.6

6 Justice Mundy “disagree[s]” that plaintiff’s counsel emphasized Dr. Hayek’s testimony
on pain and suffering in his closing argument. Concurring and Dissenting Opinion at 2
n.1. Yet, the trial transcript indicates counsel did just that by stating:
       The law says that you should award an amount that will fully and fairly
       compensate him for any conscious pain and suffering and loss of life’s
       pleasures that you determined he suffered as a result of the [d]efendants’
       negligence up to an including the time of his death. So what is the evidence
       on this? It came mostly from Diana Kanowski, who was our first witness –
       it seems like so long ago – and Dr. Hayek.
N.T. 12/9/19, at 78-79 (emphasis added).                In addition, Justice Mundy writes,
“[t]o the extent the Majority suggests that expert testimony is needed to award pain and
suffering damages, I disagree.” Concurring and Dissenting Opinion at 2. We are not so
suggesting. Our determination that, under the particular circumstances of this case, an
itemized jury award of pain and suffering damages would have demonstrated Dr. Hayek’s
testimony impacted the jury’s verdict does not imply expert testimony is always required
for recovery of such damages. Justice Mundy further argues that “[b]ecause [defendants]
waived a new trial by failing to request a special verdict form,” our discussion of how a
special verdict slip would have clarified the effect of Dr. Hayek’s expert testimony is “obiter
dicta” that she “cannot join.” Id. at 2. But, waiver under the general verdict rule requires
that a special verdict slip would have clarified the basis for a general verdict. See Shiflett,
217 A.3d at 236 (“Importantly, in both cases a special interrogatory would have provided
the necessary clarification, and because the defendant failed to request that a clarifying
special interrogatory be added to the verdict sheet that would have obviated the need for
a new trial, the verdict will stand. As we indicated in Halper, we will not shift to a plaintiff
the burden of a new trial based upon a defendant’s failure to request a clarifying special
interrogatory.”). Hence, our consideration of the clarification question, and conclusion
that a specified award for pain and suffering would have clarified the evidentiary impact

                                       [J-22-2022] - 24
       Defendants’ reliance on Pennsylvania’s Suggested Standard Civil Jury

Instructions is misplaced. The suggested instructions “are not binding[.]” Commonwealth

v. Eichinger, 108 A.3d 821, 845 (Pa. 2014).         “[R]ather, as their title suggests, the

instructions are guides only.” Id. Precedential decisions by this Court, on the other hand,

are mandatory and controlling. See Commonwealth v. H.D., 247 A.3d 1062, 1064 n.1

(Pa. 2021) (“Of course, a court would be bound by language included in the suggested

instructions that is made mandatory by a precedential judicial decision.”). Our binding

decisions in Halper and Shiflett call for waiver here, irrespective of what the suggested

instructions propose.

       To be sure, our precedents do not proscribe the itemization of survival damages,

as defendants contend. In the Ferne case cited by defendants, the Court held:

       There is another reason why these verdicts cannot be allowed to stand.
       The trial judge charged that the widow was entitled to certain damages and
       the daughter was entitled to certain damages, with the result that the jury
       assessed a specific sum in favor of the one and a specific sum in favor of
       the other. The Death Statute . . . provides that the sum recovered in the
       action shall go to the parties beneficially entitled thereto in the proportions
       in which they would take the personal estate of the decedent in case of
       intestacy; therefore the award made by the jury in such actions is not to be
       apportioned by them among the beneficiaries; their award must be merely
       a lump sum which is then distributable as prescribed by the statute.

Ferne, 69 A.2d at 107. Hence, Ferne is inapposite for two reasons. First, it called for a

lump sum award under the Wrongful Death Act, not the Survival Act, and the latter statute

is at issue here. Second, Ferne disapproved apportionment between beneficiaries, not

of Dr. Hayek’s expert opinion notwithstanding the neighbor’s lay testimony, are necessary
to our waiver holding. See BouSamra v. Excela Health, 210 A.3d 967, 967 n.5 (Pa. 2019)
(“Dicta is generally regarded as information in an opinion which is ‘not necessary to the
determination of the case.’”), quoting In re L.J., 79 A.3d 1073, 1079 (Pa. 2013).

                                      [J-22-2022] - 25
itemization of the components of a damage award, and it is the absence of itemization

which gave rise to the waiver in this case.

       Nor are we moved by the efforts of defendants and their amici to distinguish the

Superior Court’s persuasive decisions in Birth Center and Krock. While Birth Center may

not have involved an action under the Survival Act, the opinion squarely declines to

disturb a jury award based on the failure to request a more structured verdict slip. And,

although Birth Center stopped short of finding “waiver in a technical sense,” the Superior

Court nonetheless concluded “the absence of special interrogatories . . . thwarted” its

review. Birth Center, 727 A.2d at 1163 n.16. Moreover, we disagree with defendants

and amici that unlike the opaque jury awards in Birth Center and Krock, the amount of

pain and suffering damages here is readily deducible from the record. To the contrary,

as discussed, the jury was instructed that damages under the Survival Act included four

components, of which pain and suffering was but one. The jury was told that in addition

to pain and suffering, survival damages also included loss of life’s pleasures, past lost

earnings, and future lost earnings. The jurors were also instructed they were not bound

by the expert testimony regarding economic damages. Additionally, plaintiff argued for

damages as to each of the four components of survival damages and urged the jurors to

make their own, independent decisions regarding the amounts of damages associated

with the loss of life’s pleasures and lost earnings. Given these circumstances, whether

and to what extent the jury awarded pain and suffering damages is not at all clear or self-

evident. In fact, it is entirely possible the jury awarded no pain and suffering damages at

all. The reason we don’t know, of course, is that the jury answered a general verdict slip.

                                     [J-22-2022] - 26
       Respecting defendants’ policy arguments against application of the general verdict

rule, we again emphasize the rules promote the beneficial policy goals of judicial economy

and fair treatment of the parties. See Shiflett, 217 A.3d at 234 n.8. More fundamentally,

precedent guides our result. We are not deciding this case on a blank slate, and any

policy concerns must give way to our established case law dictating a finding of waiver.

       Lastly, we reject the request to apply the general verdict rule to the present facts

on a prospective basis only. We rejected a similar argument in Shiflett. There, the dissent

contended the Court’s decision “constitute[d] an expansion of the Halper precept, and

that as a result, given the lack of advance notice, it should only be applied prospectively.”

Id. at 236 n.11 (internal quotation marks omitted). The majority disagreed, concluding

our decision could “not in any respect be described as an expansion of the general verdict

rule as adopted in Halper” but rather constituted “a straightforward application of Halper’s

general verdict rule[.]” Id. The Court noted the defendant “had clear advance notice of

the general verdict rule, as Halper was decided seven years prior to the time of trial in the

present case.” Id. Like Shiflett, our decision here reflects a straightforward application of

the general verdict rule, as defendants failed to request a special verdict slip clarifying the

basis for a general verdict, and the verdict otherwise rests upon valid grounds.

Defendants not only had ample advance notice of Halper, but Shiflett too was decided

prior to the trial here. For these reasons, we follow the normal course and apply today’s

holding to the case and parties before us.

                                              IV.

       In sum, because application of the general verdict rule to this case is consistent

with the letter and spirit of the rule as it has been construed by this Court for over thirteen

                                      [J-22-2022] - 27
years, we hold defendants waived a new trial on survival damages under the rule.

Consequently, the order of the Superior Court is reversed, and the case is remanded to

that court for consideration of the appellate issues it did not address.7

       Chief Justice Baer and Justices Todd, Donohue, Wecht and Brobson join the

opinion.

       Justice Mundy files a concurring and dissenting opinion.

7 In addressing the remaining issues, the Superior Court shall consider whether these
claims are also waived by defendants’ failure to request a special verdict slip itemizing
the amount of pain and suffering damages.

                                      [J-22-2022] - 28