Vasquez v. Mabini

Present: Lacy, Keenan, Koontz, Kinser, Lemons and Agee, JJ.,
and Russell, S.J.

ROGELIO VASQUEZ, et al.                    OPINION BY
                                 SENIOR JUSTICE CHARLES S. RUSSELL
v.   Record No. 040913                    January 14, 2005

APOLINARIO MABINI, as Joint Heir and
Administrator of the Estate
of Tamara Jane Mabini

           FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY
                    Dennis J. Smith, Judge

     This appeal presents questions whether expert testimony

was erroneously admitted in the trial of a wrongful death case

and whether objections to the testimony were waived.

                      Facts and Proceedings

     The facts will be summarized in the light most favorable

to the plaintiff, the prevailing party at trial.    On

January 29, 2002, at about 12:45 p.m., while Tamara Mabini was

standing at the intersection of Routes 6363 and 602 in Reston,

she was struck from behind and killed by a Fairfax County

Connector bus.   The bus was driven by Rogelio Vasquez, an

employee of First Transit, Inc., which operated the bus

service under a contract with Fairfax County.

     At the time of her death, Mrs. Mabini was 53 years old.

She had been employed as a part-time clerical worker earning

$8.00 per hour for the preceding three months but was seeking

full-time clerical employment.    She was living with her

husband, Apolinario Mabini, and her adult son by a former
marriage, Matt Pomeroy, who was in his late twenties.    Pomeroy

was bipolar and had emotional and psychological problems. He

had worked only sporadically and was dependent upon Mrs.

Mabini for most of his care.   Pomeroy died on June 2, 2002,

less than six months after his mother’s death.   In addition to

her part-time employment, Mrs. Mabini had devoted some 36

hours per week to caring for her household.

     Three months before the accident, the Mabinis had moved

to Virginia from Texas.   Mrs. Mabini had worked there for over

a year as a clerical worker and earlier had worked as a

hairdresser for 27 years.   A primary motivation for the

family’s move to Virginia had been Mrs. Mabini’s desire to be

near her married daughter and three-year-old grandchild, who

lived in Falls Church.    She had an “extremely close”

relationship with them and gave them considerable household

assistance.

     Apolinario Mabini brought this action for wrongful death

as administrator and representative of the beneficiaries of

Mrs. Mabini’s estate, against Vasquez and First Transit, Inc.

A three-day jury trial ended January 15, 2004, with a verdict

of $1,999,872.00 for the plaintiff, upon which the trial court

entered final judgment.   We granted the defendants an appeal

limited to a single assignment of error: that the trial court

abused its discretion in permitting plaintiff’s expert witness


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to present opinion testimony that was “speculative,

counterfactual, and unsupported by the evidence in the case.”

     At trial, the plaintiff presented the testimony of

Richard B. Edelman, a Professor Emeritus of Finance at The

American University, as an expert witness with regard to the

decedent’s expected loss of income and the economic value of

the loss of her services, protection, care and assistance.     No

objection was made to his qualifications.   He testified that

Mrs. Mabini’s lost income and benefits would have amounted to

$121,533 if she had worked until age 60 and $203,145 if she

had worked until age 66.   He gave the value of her lost

household services as $343,287 and reasonable funeral expenses

as $12,403.   His calculation of the total economic loss to the

beneficiaries was thus $477,223 based on retirement at 60 and

$558,835 based on retirement at 66.   These conclusions were

necessarily dependent upon certain assumptions to which the

defendants objected: that the decedent would have found full-

time employment the day after the accident at a wage of $8.00

per hour ($16,000 per year) and would have remained so

employed until retirement; that her employer would have

provided additional contributions amounting to 3.7% of her

income in the form of a “401(k)” or similar retirement

benefit; that her income would increase by 4.25% per year, and

that Pomeroy, her dependent adult son, would have continued to


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live 24 years into the future even though the witness knew

that he had died before trial.    The defendants also objected

to the witness’ failure to consider the life expectancy of the

decedent’s husband in arriving at the economic value of her

lost household services.

                             Discussion

                          A. Expert Testimony

     Code § 8.01-401.1 provides that an expert witness in a

civil case may testify and render an opinion “from facts,

circumstances or data made known to or perceived by such

witness at or before the hearing or trial,” and that such data

need not be such as to be admissible in evidence “if of a type

normally relied upon by others in the particular field of

expertise. . . .”   We have never, however, construed that

section to permit the admission of expert testimony that lacks

evidentiary support.    Lawson v. Doe, 239 Va. 477, 483, 391

S.E.2d 333, 336 (1990).    Estimates of damages based entirely

on statistics and assumptions are too remote and speculative

to permit “an intelligent and probable estimate of damages.”

Bulala v. Boyd, 239 Va. 218, 233, 389 S.E.2d 670, 677 (1990).

          In order to form a reliable basis for a calculation
     of lost future income or loss of earning capacity, such
     evidence must be grounded upon facts specific to the
     individual whose loss is being calculated.

Id. (emphasis added).



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     Expert testimony founded upon assumptions that have no

basis in fact is not merely subject to refutation by cross-

examination or by counter-experts; it is inadmissible.

Virginia Financial Assoc. v. ITT Hartford Group, 266 Va. 177,

183, 585 S.E.2d 789, 792 (2003).     Failure of the trial court

to strike such testimony upon a motion timely made is error

subject to reversal on appeal.   Countryside Corporation v.

Taylor, 263 Va. 549, 553, 561 S.E.2d 680, 682 (2002); Gilbert

v. Summers, 240 Va. 155, 159-61, 393 S.E.2d 213, 215-16

(1990).   Furthermore, expert testimony is inadmissible if the

expert fails to consider all the variables that bear upon the

inferences to be deduced from the facts observed.

Countryside, 263 Va. at 553, 561 S.E.2d at 682.

     Here, the Edelman testimony was inadmissible for all the

foregoing reasons. The economic value of the decedent’s lost

income was projected from a base of $16,000 per year,

beginning the day after the accident and continuing until

retirement, based upon an assumption of full-time clerical

work with added annual increases and fringe benefits.    On

cross-examination, however, the expert admitted that Mrs.

Mabini had little experience as a clerical worker, had earned

less than $1000 the previous year and that her annual earnings

for the preceding several years had never exceeded $7000.     She

had been seeking full-time clerical employment since moving to


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Virginia, but had been unable to find anything but part-time

work.    The record does not show that she had ever held full-

time employment or received any fringe benefits.    She was not

seeking employment as a hairdresser, despite her experience in

that occupation, but the expert’s opinion was that her

potential earnings would be approximately the same in either

field.    On similar facts, we have previously held that such

projections lack the required grounding in the applicable

facts, and hence are inadmissible.    See Greater Richmond

Transit Co. v. Wilkerson, 242 Va. 65, 71-72, 406 S.E.2d 28, 33

(1991).

        The expert’s assumption that the decedent would have

received a 3.7% retirement benefit in addition to her salary

was premised on his further assumption that she would have

found full-time clerical employment the day after the

accident.    He testified: “most full-time employees get that.”

His conclusion, however, was based only upon a statistic

applied to facts entirely unrelated to the personal

circumstances of the decedent.    Similarly, his assumption that

her income would have increased 4.25% each year until

retirement was based upon a statistical projection of wage

rate increases applied to the unfounded assumption of full-

time employment.




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        In calculating the value of Mrs. Mabini’s lost services,

protection, care and assistance, the expert made the

assumption that her son, Pomeroy, would have lived throughout

his mother’s remaining life expectancy, an additional 24

years, and that he would continue as an adult dependent

throughout that time.    In fact, the expert was aware that

Pomeroy had died before trial, less than six months after his

mother’s death.    In this respect, the present case is similar

to Countryside, where an expert “assumed a fiction and based

his opinion of damages upon that fiction.”    We held that

testimony to be “speculative and unreliable as a matter of

law.”    Countryside, 263 Va. at 553, 561 S.E.2d at 682.

                               B. Waiver

        The plaintiff contends that the defendants waived any

objection they might have had to the Edelman testimony by

failing to make a contemporaneous objection in the trial

court.    Seven months before trial, the court entered a

scheduling order requiring the parties to identify expert

witnesses at least 90 days before trial.    Pursuant to that

order and an interrogatory request, the plaintiff designated

Edelman as his expert and filed a summary of the nature of his

expected testimony.    The scheduling order provided that “all

information discoverable under Rule 4:1(b)4(A)[i] . . . shall

be provided” and that objections to witnesses were to be filed


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five days before trial or would be considered waived.    The

cited rule requires disclosure of “the substance of the facts

and opinions to which the expert is expected to testify and a

summary of the grounds for each opinion.”   The defendants

filed no pretrial objection to Edelman’s proposed testimony

and the plaintiff points to that failure as a waiver.    An

examination of the summary filed by the plaintiff, however,

would have given the defendants no reason to object to the

proposed testimony.    It contained no figures, recited no work

history and revealed none of the assumptions upon which the

witness intended to rely, particularly those of full-time

employment and ongoing care for Pomeroy despite his death.     It

failed to put the defendants on notice of any of the fallacies

in the opinion that would become apparent at trial, and their

failure to make a pretrial objection did not, therefore,

constitute a waiver.

     At trial, after the opening statements of counsel and in

the absence of the jury, defense counsel advised the court

that he believed that some of the plaintiff’s expert testimony

might be inadmissible in that “many of the assumptions and

facts that form the basis of his opinion aren’t in accordance

with the evidence of the case” and that “there will be

objection to various of his opinions . . . as assumptions with

no evidentiary support.”   The trial court responded: “I’ll


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have to deal with those on an individual bas[i]s. . . .

“[W]e’ll deal with it as he testifies.”   The trial court

informed counsel that such objections could be heard at a

bench conference or in the absence of the jury.

     The plaintiff’s direct examination of Edelman did not

reveal his reliance upon the unsupported assumptions that

underlay his opinion, and the defendants made no objections at

that stage.   Cross-examination was necessary to bring these

matters to light.   After a brief redirect, the defendants

moved to strike the Edelman testimony as “founded on

assumptions that have no basis in fact,” citing Tarmac Mid-

Atlantic, Inc. v. Smiley Block Co., 250 Va. 161, 458 S.E.2d

462 (1995).   The plaintiff argued that it was premature to

rule on a lack of factual foundation for the expert testimony

because he had not yet completed his case in chief and that he

intended to call further witnesses.    The court stated: “I’ll

wait till the evidence comes out,” but further observed: “I’m

not concerned about his arguments on methodology.   I think

that becomes an issue for the jury.”

     The plaintiff then called four more witnesses, none of

whom gave evidence that would provide any factual support for

the expert’s assumptions to which the defendants had objected.

The plaintiff rested and the defendants renewed their motion

to strike the Edelman testimony.    The court overruled the


                                9
motion on the ground that the question of factual support for

the expert’s assumptions created an issue for the jury.

     In these circumstances, we cannot say that the defendants

waived their objections to the Edelman testimony.     The trial

court was advised, before any evidence had been presented, of

the probability of an objection and the grounds for it.    The

trial court deferred a ruling until the evidence was

presented.   At the first opportunity, after the flaws in the

expert testimony had become apparent on cross-examination, the

defendants moved to strike it.    The trial court postponed a

ruling until the plaintiff had rested, at which time the

defendants renewed their motion.

     One of the salutary purposes of our contemporaneous

objection rule, now set forth in Rule 5:25, is to afford the

trial judge a fair opportunity to rule intelligently on

objections while there is still an opportunity to correct

errors in the trial court, see State Hwy. Comm’r. v. Easley,

215 Va. 197, 201, 207 S.E.2d 870, 873 (1974), and to protect

the trial court from litigants asserting error on appeal that

had not been raised at trial.    Shocket v. Silberman, 209 Va.

490, 494, 165 S.E.2d 414, 418 (1969).   Here, as in

Countryside, the party objecting to flawed expert testimony

made no objection while the testimony was being given, but

moved to strike at its conclusion, after the flaws had become


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apparent, thus giving the trial court a proper opportunity to

correct the error of admitting it.   See 263 Va. at 552 & n.2,

561 S.E.2d at 682 & n.2.

                           Conclusion

     Because the expert testimony was based upon fictional

assumptions not supported by the evidence, it was speculative

and unreliable as a matter of law and should have been

stricken.   Because the defendants made a timely motion to

strike the evidence and did not waive their objections to it,

the trial court erred in denying their motion.   Because the

jury found for the plaintiff on the issue of negligence and no

error is assigned to that finding, and because there was

evidence, other than the expert testimony, to support an award

of damages, we will reverse the judgment and remand the case

to the trial court for a new trial, limited to the issue of

damages.

                                          Reversed and remanded.




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