NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-6259-99T3
KEVIN T. PERSLEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
NEW JERSEY TRANSIT BUS
OPERATIONS AND GABE
BARRENTINE,
Defendants-Respondents.
Argued October 17, 2002 - Decided January 17,
2003
Before Judges Wefing, Wecker and Lisa.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Morris County, L-524-99.
Arthur J. Russo argued the cause for
appellant.
Esther E. Bakonyi, Deputy Attorney General,
argued the cause for respondents (David
Samson, Attorney General, attorney for
respondents; Michael J. Haas, Assistant
Attorney General, of counsel; Ms. Bakonyi and
Karen L. Jordan, Deputy Attorney General, on
the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LISA, J.A.D.
Plaintiff, Kevin T. Persley, appeals from a judgment entered
on a jury verdict awarding him no damages in this personal injury
action where liability was conceded by defendants, New Jersey
Transit Bus Operations, Inc. and Gabe Barrentine. On appeal,
plaintiff argues the trial judge committed reversible error by
permitting a video presentation to the jury of a computer-generated
simulation of the accident. He further argues he was denied a fair
trial because the trial judge (1) improperly curtailed his cross-
examination of certain defense experts, (2) allowed defense counsel
to pose improper questions in cross-examining him, (3) refused to
permit plaintiff to present certain rebuttal testimony, and (4)
allowed the defense to utilize certain inadmissible evidence and
make improper arguments. We reject these arguments and affirm.
I
On May 17, 1990, plaintiff was a passenger in defendants' bus,
commuting to work in New York City. According to the bus driver,
Barrentine, while traveling on Route 80, he slowed the bus to
thirty-five to forty miles per hour when it began to drizzle. When
a car spun out approximately two car lengths in front of the bus,
Barrentine applied his brakes, but was unable to stop before
colliding with the rear-end of the car in front of him, operated by
James Marquis. Barrentine immediately inquired whether any
passengers were injured, with no response. The police soon
arrived, and again no passengers reported injuries. All
passengers, including plaintiff, were loaded onto a replacement bus
and continued to their destination. The impact was at a low
velocity. Marquis' car was stopped when it was struck by the bus,
and was pushed forward only about one to two feet. It sustained
only minor damage to the rear bumper. The trunk did not pop open,
and there was no damage to the sides. The bus incurred no damage.
Both vehicles were driveable. According to the unrefuted testimony
of defendants' accident reconstruction expert, the speed of the bus
at impact was six miles per hour.
Plaintiff was asleep just prior to the accident. He described
the events as follows: He recalled waking up as his body was being
thrown forward and flinging up his hands in an unsuccessful attempt
to prevent his head from striking the metal handle on the seat in
front of him. As his hands and the left side of his head,
including his left eye area, struck the handle, plaintiff heard a
pop, saw a bright light and lost consciousness. While he quickly
regained consciousness, he remained dazed and confused. Although
disoriented, plaintiff managed to board the new bus without
incident and did not report the problems he was having because he
thought he would soon feel better. Once on the new bus, however,
his hands started to shake uncontrollably and, upon arriving in New
York, he immediately located a pay phone and called his longtime
chiropractor, Dr. Hellender, who specialized in headache relief.
After scheduling an appointment for that same day, he called in
sick to work and returned to New Jersey.
According to plaintiff, as a result of the accident, he
sustained: (1) disc herniations in his cervical and lumbar spine
which were treated with surgery in 1996 and 1997, but which left
him with periodic back pain which sometimes spreads down his arms
and legs; (2) continuous migraine headaches; (3) a retinal tear in
his left eye, which was repaired in 1991; (4) a permanent brain
injury which left him with intermittent vertical jumping (a vision
impairment), balance problems and considerable neurological
deficits; (5) hearing loss and tinnitus; (6) an injury to his
temporal mandibular joint, requiring the permanent usage of an
orthodontic device; and (7) bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome, which
was treated with surgery but ultimately returned. He treated with
numerous doctors. Plaintiff reported that, due to his ongoing
problems, and after being fired from several sales jobs for lack of
production, he finally stopped working in May 1998. He stated he
takes ten or eleven medications on a regular basis and no longer
enjoys life or has any goals.
On May 29, 1986, plaintiff was rear-ended by a small pickup
truck while stopped at a traffic light, with sufficient force to
push his car sixty feet. As a result, he obtained treatment for
neck stiffness and pain, lower back pain, "rubber band" headaches,
dizziness, blurred vision, and numbness and tingling in his hands.
Plaintiff also acknowledged receiving treatment for many of these
same symptoms prior to the 1986 accident, as far back as 1984.
Although plaintiff asserted his chiropractor, Dr. Joseph Tuzzeo,
discharged him pain and symptom free a year after the 1986
accident, he admitted that: (1) he had been told that his
headaches were chronic and would continue; (2) he subsequently
returned to Tuzzeo complaining of vertigo, blurred vision, neck
pain, stiffness and trembling in his hands; (3) he consulted with
at least five doctors between late 1987 and early 1990 complaining
of persistent neck pain, chronic headaches, dizziness and trouble
with his vision; and (4) in connection with the lawsuit he filed
following the 1986 accident, he executed a certification dated July
1990 in which he represented he had been advised he would have
headaches for the rest of his life as a result of the 1986
accident.
Plaintiff was involved in a third automobile accident on
November 10, 1993, when a seventeen-year-old driving an old car in
the wrong direction across a parking lot rammed into the side of
his car. Plaintiff acknowledged he had increased neck and back
pain from this accident, but contends it lasted only about two
weeks, after which he returned to his condition before that
accident. Plaintiff complained of severe back pain and left the
scene in an ambulance. However, plaintiff reported that none of
his treating physicians felt he sustained any new injury and he
decided not to sue the driver responsible for the accident.
The trial of the case before us spanned three weeks. Both
sides called numerous medical experts, specializing in fields
including dentistry, neurology, opthamology, neuropsychiatry,
orthopedics, ear, nose and throat, and rehabilitation and pain
management. Plaintiff also called an expert in speech and language
pathology and a psychological-vocational expert. We need not
recount the conflicting testimony and opinions of these experts
because the substantive aspects of their testimony is not a basis
of the appeal. Nor is it contended the verdict is against the
weight of the evidence. Rather, plaintiff contends that the trial
was conducted unfairly, with the trial judge improperly injecting
himself into the trial, improperly curtailing his ability to cross-
examine defense witnesses, allowing defendant's counsel to utilize
improper cross-examination techniques on him, and allowing
defendants to utilize inadmissible evidence and make improper
arguments. We can summarize the medical opinions by noting that
plaintiff's doctors opined that his complained-of conditions were
caused by the May 17, 1990 accident. Defendants' doctors, on the
other hand, opined that plaintiff suffered no substantial injury,
that either the injuries did not exist or they were not caused by
the May 17, 1990 accident, and that plaintiff was a malingerer who
was grossly exaggerating his complaints.
Dr. Wayne Nolte, an engineer, testified on behalf of the
defense as an accident reconstruction expert. Nolte gathered data
regarding the size and weight of the bus and the Marquis car, the
damage to the Marquis car, plaintiff's height, weight, position in
the bus and recollection of the accident, and the dimensions of the
seat on which plaintiff was sitting and the location of the handle
he struck. Nolte also reviewed: (1) Barrentine's deposition
testimony that he was traveling at only thirty to forty miles per
hour when the spin-out happened, that he pumped his brakes and did
not skid, and that the entire sequence of events took place within
three to four seconds; and (2) Marquis' deposition testimony that
he was stopped for four to six seconds before the bus struck him
and that his car moved forward only one to two feet upon impact.
Assuming the bus was traveling at forty miles per hour at the
time the spin-out occurred, and the collision occurred four seconds
later, Nolte determined the bus struck the car at six miles per
hour. He further determined that, as the bus decelerated,
plaintiff's head moved forward at a speed of 3.6 inches per second.
Nolte furnished all of this information to an animator and
instructed him to prepare a simulation depicting the movement of
plaintiff's body during the four-second period leading up to the
impact. Nolte later reviewed the finished animation to confirm its
accuracy.
Nolte conceded that, because he was not a biomechanical
engineer, he could not say, nor was the animation intended to
depict, the force with which plaintiff's head struck the seat in
front of him. Nolte further acknowledged that, if the various
factors he used in his calculations, such as the speed of the bus,
were not accurate, the video would not be an accurate
representation of the movement of plaintiff's body. The four-
second animation was shown to the jury first in real time, and then
in slow motion over the course of sixteen seconds.
Although Nolte insisted that his animation was accurate, he
admitted that: (1) there was deposition testimony from Marquis
that he and all of the traffic around him was traveling at 55 miles
per hour at the time of the spin-out; (2) at the time of the
accident, Barrentine had reported to the responding police officer
that he braked and slid into the car in front of him; and (3)
Barrentine had not been certain that the accident occurred over the
course of four seconds. Nolte additionally conceded that the
animation did not depict the effect on plaintiff's body of
Barrentine's admitted swerving just prior to the accident.
II
Plaintiff contends he is entitled to a new trial because of
the trial judge's improper curtailment of his cross-examination of
four medical expert witnesses and Dr. Nolte. According to
plaintiff, not only was he denied the right to properly cross-
examine these witnesses, but the judge's actions and remarks in
this regard revealed the judge's disdain for plaintiff's counsel
and his disbelief in the merits of plaintiff's case.
The conduct of a trial, including cross-examination and its
appropriate limits, is within the discretion of the trial court.
Casino Reinvestment Dev. Auth. v. Lustgarten,
332 N.J. Super. 472,
492 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
165 N.J. 607 (2000);
see also
N.J.R.E. 611(b). Exercise of that discretion is ordinarily not
interfered with unless there is a clear abuse of discretion which
has deprived a party of a fair trial.
Daisey v. Keene Corp.,
268 N.J. Super. 325, 334 (App. Div. 1993).
Although great latitude is given to a trial court in the
conduct of a trial, there are bounds within which the judge must
stay.
Mercer v. Weyerhaeuser Co.,
324 N.J. Super. 290, 298 (App.
Div. 1999). A judge must "conduct the trial in a fair and
impartial manner, without making remarks that might prejudice a
party or which are calculated to influence the minds of the jury."
Cestero v. Ferrara,
110 N.J. Super. 264, 273 (App. Div. 1970),
aff'd,
57 N.J. 497 (1971). A judge should never unfairly criticize
or humiliate counsel, especially in front of the jury.
Mercer v.
Weyerhaeuser Co.,
supra, 324
N.J. Super. at 298. A judge's failure
to abide by these guidelines "can easily prejudice a jury since it
conveys the opinion of the judge as to his belief or disbelief in
one side of the case."
State v. Zwillman,
112 N.J. Super. 6, 21
(App. Div. 1970),
certif. denied,
57 N.J. 603 (1971). Alleged
misconduct by a trial judge must be reviewed within the context of
the entire record in order to determine its prejudicial impact.
Mercer v. Weyerhaeuser Co.,
supra, 324
N.J. Super. at 298.
Plaintiff complains of the trial judge's rulings and demeanor
in cross-examination by his counsel of Doctors Kutner
(neuropsychiatrist), Heller (orthopedist), Rothman (neurologist),
and Liva (opthamologist). From our review of the record, we are
satisfied the trial judge did not abuse his discretion. The
recurring problem that arose during cross-examination of these
witnesses involved the attempts by plaintiff's counsel to read
favorable portions of reports from plaintiff's doctors under the
guise of posing questions to defendants' doctors. This was after
the defense doctors testified they had reviewed the plaintiff's
doctor's report and it did not change their opinions. Upon
objections being made, the trial judge admonished plaintiff's
counsel at sidebar conferences to refrain from this practice. When
counsel persisted, the judge did admonish him in the presence of
the jury. To a lesser extent, plaintiff points to instances where
the judge admonished his attorney in the jury's presence for asking
repetitive questions and questions regarding matters not in
dispute.
In the overall context of this lengthy trial we are not
persuaded that these incidents, individually or collectively,
deprived plaintiff of a fair trial. We agree with the trial
judge's rulings substantively, and we do not detect in the judge's
demeanor any pervasive criticism of plaintiff's counsel or
undermining of plaintiff's case. We note that the judge sustained
and overruled many objections made by both sides throughout the
trial. We are convinced he conducted the trial evenhandedly.
Contrary to plaintiff's suggestion, the judge's conduct and remarks
here pale in comparison to the numerous "intemperate rebukes" of
counsel and insulting asides to the jury in
Mercer v. Weyerhaeuser
Co.,
supra, where the trial judge frequently "telegraphed to the
jury that he had little respect for defense counsel's legal acumen
and trial skills" and "create[d] the impression that she did not
know what she was doing." 324
N.J. Super. at 313, 314, 315.
Plaintiff contends the trial judge improperly interfered with
his cross-examination of Nolte as follows:
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Okay. Well, let's
talk about first the speed. Did you look at
Mr. Marquis' deposition as to what he
indicated the speed of himself and the other
vehicles around him was?
[Nolte]: Yes.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: And particularly on
his deposition . . ., didn't he say that his
speed was approximately 55 miles an hour, a
little under, and the speed that everyone was
traveling around him was 55?
[Nolte]: Prior to the scenario happening,
yes.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Well, prior to him
braking he was going 55 and he said the
traffic was moving at 55?
[Nolte]: That's correct, that's correct.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Now, Mr. Barrentine
said that his speed, before he started
braking, was 30 to 40 miles per hour?
[Nolte]: That's correct.
. . . .
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Doctor, you took Mr.
Barrentine's testimony -- and that was the
first element -- that he was going 35 to 40
miles an hour?
. . . .
[Nolte]: That was the only information I had,
in all of the information, that gave me a
point in time and gave me a speed.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Okay.
[Nolte]: And that's what I relied on.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: So if his speed was 55
miles per hour, that would make a difference
to this end result. Correct?
[Defense counsel]: Your Honor, I have to
object. I mean --
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Again --
THE COURT: I'll overrule the objection.
Let the witness answer the question.
[Nolte]: Okay. If Mr. Barrentine's testimony
is now 55 miles per hour, yes, that does
change it.
THE COURT:
Okay. But let the record reflect
there's no evidence on anyone's part that his
speed was 55 miles an hour. Just so that we
all know that.
Yes, you could say if his testimony was
that he was going 90 miles an hour, that would
change it. Sure it would change it. We all
understand that.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Judge -- okay.
THE COURT:
There's no testimony from Mr.
Barrentine that he was going 55 miles an hour
when he's slowed for this car ahead of him.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Well, do you know how
close Mr. Barrentine was before he started
braking to the car in front of him?
[Nolte]: Yes. I believe a few car lengths.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Okay. And do you
recall what Mr. Marquis said about his speed
before he started braking?
[Nolte]: Well, he -- at some point he was
traveling at the speed limit. But he doesn't
give a point in time when he reduced his speed
to flow with the traffic.
. . . .
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Let's go back. Let's
go down to page 17, Doctor Nolte. On page 17
of Mr. Marquis['] . . . deposition. Let's go
to line 14.
What was the speed of vehicles in the far
left lane as you were traveling before the car
in front spun out?
Do you see that, sir?
[Nolte]: Yes.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: And do you see the
answer: We were at the limit. At that point
it's 55 or a little below.
Do you see that?
[Nolte]: Yes, I do.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Was there a reason for
being below the limit? That was what traffic
was doing . . . . Was traffic moving
consistently at or near the speed limit? Yes.
Had it been moving for some time before this
accident occurred? Yes . . . . You were
traveling for some time at or near the speed
limit? Yes.
Do you see that, sir?
[Nolte]: Yes, I do.
[Emphasis added.]
Plaintiff claims the emphasized comment by the judge "tainted"
his entire cross-examination of Nolte because there was other
evidence that the bus was traveling at a higher speed. We
disagree. While the judge did initially state there was no
evidence that Barrentine had been driving at 55 miles per hour, he
then clarified that there had been no testimony from Barrentine to
this effect. Further, plaintiff's counsel was subsequently
permitted to make his point that Marquis had testified during his
deposition that he and all of the traffic around him were traveling
at the speed of 55 miles per hour when the spin-out occurred, and
that this evidence had been disregarded by Nolte in preparing his
simulation. The cross-examination of Nolte was not tainted by the
trial judge's intervention.
III
We next address plaintiff's contention that the trial judge
committed reversible error when he permitted the jury to view the
video simulation of the accident prepared at Nolte's direction.
Plaintiff also argues the trial judge improperly endorsed the
animation through his questioning of Nolte. We disagree.
In the course of Nolte's testimony, after Nolte explained the
information utilized and the procedure for making the video
simulation, defense counsel asked that the jury be permitted to
view the video. Before permitting plaintiff's counsel to voir dire
Nolte regarding the video, the trial judge inquired of Nolte as
follows:
THE COURT: Does that -- this animation, it's
not a person in the seat. It's a virtual
person. Is that --
[Nolte]: Correct.
THE COURT: And does this animation accurately
depict what would happen with a person of the
same height, build as the plaintiff, given the
same type of accident?
[Nolte]: Absolutely. Absolutely.
During the subsequent voir dire by plaintiff's counsel, before
the jury, Nolte conceded that, because he was not a biomechanical
engineer, he could not say, nor was the animation intended to
depict, the force with which plaintiff's head struck the seat in
front of him. Nolte further acknowledged that, if the various
factors he used in his calculations, such as the speed of the bus,
were not accurate, the video would not be an accurate
representation of the movement of plaintiff's body.
After plaintiff's counsel concluded his voir dire, he objected
to admission of the simulation on the ground that it failed to
recreate all of the variables of the accident and left the
prejudicial impression that the accident happened exactly the way
it was depicted in the video. The judge disagreed. The four-
second animation was shown to the jury in real time and in slow
motion over the course of sixteen seconds.See footnote 11 Thereafter,
plaintiff's counsel cross-examined Nolte as follows:
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Doctor, the
illustration that you gave and your
conclusions are based upon certain facts that
you brought into the formula. Isn't that
correct?
[Nolte]: The facts that were testified to by
the various parties.
[Plaintiff's counsel]: Well, let's take them
one at a time, Doctor.
If any of those factors change, Doctor,
we have a different picture here. Don't we?
[Nolte]: Oh, if anybody changes their
testimony, absolutely you have a different
picture. Sure. Depends on how they change.
Nolte conceded the video simulation would have been different
if he had relied upon certain other record evidence which suggested
that Barrentine had been traveling at a speed greater than forty
miles per hour and had jammed on his brakes before sliding into the
car in front of him only three seconds later. He also conceded
that the animation did not depict the effect on plaintiff's body of
Barrentine's admitted swerving just prior to the accident and that
he was not able to calculate the forces that were brought to bear
on plaintiff's body.
Admissibility of evidence concerning reconstruction of a
particular event is within the area of judicial discretion and
turns on whether the reconstruction sufficiently duplicates the
original event as described by witnesses or participants.
Balian
v. General Motors,
121 N.J. Super. 118, 126 (App. Div. 1972),
certif. denied,
62 N.J. 195 (1973). A motion picture of a
reconstruction of a particular event may be admitted into evidence
when relevant and where its probative value is not offset by undue
prejudice, unfair surprise, undue consumption of trial time, or
possible confusion of issues due to the introduction of collateral
matters.
Id. at 127. Notably, the danger of undue prejudice as a
result of the jury's placing inordinate weight on a motion picture
is always present due to the tremendous dramatic impact of motion
pictures and the fact that the presentation of a motion picture is
generally cumulative to the testimony of the expert who oversaw its
production.
Id. at 128-29.
We reject plaintiff's initial contention that the trial judge
endorsed the animation through his questioning of Nolte. In
context, these questions were simply an attempt to confirm that
Nolte had taken into account plaintiff's actual measurements in
designing the virtual person seen in the simulation. As defendants
note, the judge's question about whether the animation accurately
depicted what it purported to show (vis a vis the type of accident
and the height and build of plaintiff) was obviously aimed at
determining the admissibility of the video illustration. While
these questions should have been asked outside of the presence of
the jury during a proper
N.J.R.E. 104 hearing, they were not, as
plaintiff contends, an improper attempt by the court "to enhance
the credibility of the witness to the jury." We are satisfied the
judge's questions did not have that effect.
Plaintiff next contends, relying upon of
Suanez v. Egeland,
330 N.J. Super. 190 (App. Div. 2000),
Crispin v. Volkswagenwerk AG,
248 N.J. Super. 540 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
126 N.J. 385
(1991), and
Macaluso v. Pleskin,
329 N.J. Super. 346 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
165 N.J. 138 (2000), that he was unduly prejudiced
when the jury was permitted to watch the video simulation of the
accident which was prepared based upon only select evidence. We
disagree.
In
Suanez v. Egeland,
supra, 330
N.J. Super. at 192, the
plaintiff sued the defendant for damages after allegedly suffering
a herniated disc when the car in which she was riding was rear-
ended by the defendant's slow-moving vehicle. Liability was
admitted and a jury trial was held as to damages only.
Ibid. The
defendant presented the testimony of a bioengineer who opined that
the accident was so minor that it could not have caused the
plaintiff's claimed injury.
Id. at 193. The bioengineer relied
upon a number of items in reaching this conclusion, including the
accident report, photos of the defendant's vehicle, and a short
video tape depicting a car crash dummy in an automobile being
struck at five miles per hour.
Ibid.
Following a jury verdict of no cause for action, we reversed,
holding that the playing of this tape constituted reversible error
because it had not been provided to the plaintiff in discovery, the
judge failed to instruct the jury the tape was not substantive
evidence, the tape was not properly authenticated by the
bioengineer who merely assured that it was "internationally known,"
there were many differences between the crash test depicted on the
tape and the actual accident, and the accident on the video was
shown only in extreme slow motion which gave the impression of less
movement and thus less impact.
In
Crispin v. Volkswagenwerk AG,
supra, 248
N.J. Super. at
547, the plaintiff-motorist was severely injured when his seat back
collapsed following a high-speed rear-end collision, ejecting him
out of the driver's seat to the rear seat of his 1971 Volkswagen
Beetle. He sued the manufacturer alleging, among other things,
defective seat design.
Ibid. Following a jury verdict in the
plaintiff's favor, the defendant appealed, arguing in part that the
trial judge erred in restricting its use of certain videotapes of
crash testing performed by the National Highway Traffic & Safety
Association on non-Volkswagens, and similar crash testing performed
by the defendant on its own automobiles.
Id. at 544, 556-57. We
rejected this argument, finding there were too many variables
between the tests and the evidence presented with regard to the
subject accident to render them probative on any point raised.
Id.
at 556-57.
In
Macaluso v. Pleskin,
supra, 329
N.J. Super. at 348, the
plaintiff's personal injury action sought damages for certain neck
injuries she sustained as a result of an automobile accident. At
trial, the judge permitted the jury to view, over the defendant's
objection, a video entitled "Soft Tissue Animation," which was
brought to court by the plaintiff's treating chiropractor and which
was actually a compilation of drawings and animation accompanied by
a narration.
Id. at 349-50. Although he refused to admit the
video into evidence because the chiropractor could not identify by
whom it had been made, the judge accepted the chiropractor's
representation that the video would serve as a visual aid to help
the jury understand his testimony regarding the anatomy of the
cervical spine and the injuries claimed by the plaintiff.
Id. at
349.
Following a jury verdict in the plaintiff's favor, we
reversed, finding the video was not a mere visual aid, but was
instead testimonial in nature and contained much material that was
not relevant to the plaintiff's injuries.
Id. at 353. As such,
and because the tape's contents were susceptible of being accepted
by the jury as substantive evidence, we concluded a new trial was
warranted.
Ibid.
We find the video simulation in this case readily
distinguishable from the videos deemed inadmissible in these cases.
Unlike the video in
Suanez, the video here was substantially
similar to the subject accident, created by means of a process
which was made known to the jury, provided to plaintiff in
discovery, and shown in real time as well as in slow motion.
Likewise, the video here differs from that in
Crispin, in that it
conformed with nearly all of the evidence surrounding the subject
accident. Finally, unlike the video in
Macaluso, the video here
was authenticated and did not incorporate a testimonial component
addressing extraneous information which could have potentially been
used by the jury as substantive evidence.
The jury viewed the tape only once. Plaintiff's counsel was
able to effectively cross-examine Nolte on the possible
discrepancies between the reconstruction and the actual happening
of the accident. We have viewed the tape, including the real time
and slow motion portions, and find it simple, straight-forward and
not misleading. We find no error in allowing the jury to view it
as an aid to Nolte's testimony. Although plaintiff also argues the
trial judge should have provided the jury with a limiting
instruction regarding the tape, no limiting instruction was
requested and even now plaintiff does not identify what the
contents of any such instruction should have been.
IV
Plaintiff's remaining arguments are that the trial judge erred
(1) by allowing defense counsel to pose improper cross-examination
questions to him, (2) by precluding certain rebuttal testimony and
(3) by allowing the defense to present evidence and make arguments
regarding plaintiff's settlement of his 1986 accident case and the
non-filing of a lawsuit regarding his 1993 motor vehicle accident.
We find no abuse of discretion on these points, and find that these
arguments lack sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written
opinion.
R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
Affirmed.
WECKER, J.A.D., concurring.
While I concur in the result, I write separately to express my
disagreement with my colleagues' conclusion in Part III that the
video simulation was "straight-forward and not misleading....[and
that there was] no error in allowing the jury to view it as an aid
to Nolte's testimony." Slip op. at 20.
In my view, the tape was inadmissible for two reasons. First,
although my colleagues recognize that Nolte disclaimed his ability
or intention to depict "the force with which plaintiff's head
struck the seat in front of him," slip op. at 14-15, that is
exactly what the video purports to show. Second, my colleagues
also recognize that Nolte "conceded that the animation did not
depict the effect on plaintiff's body of Barrentine's admitted
swerving just prior to the accident and he was unable to calculate
the forces that were brought to bear on plaintiff's body." Slip
op. at 16. Thus the video simulation gave the jury a visual
picture of the direction and strength of the forces upon
plaintiff's body (or the absence of such forces) without an
accurate basis for that visualization.
Under other circumstances, the admission of this video
simulation might be reversible error. Here, however, there was
overwhelming evidence that plaintiff's complaints were either
preexisting or exaggerated or both. I therefore find the error
harmless and concur in affirming the judgment below.
Footnote: 1 1The video, shown only once to the jury, first showed a side
view in real time and slow motion, followed by an overhead view
in real time and slow motion.