United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 02-1810
WILLIAM J. BLAKE, ET AL.,
Plaintiffs, Appellants,
v.
MICHAEL PELLEGRINO, ET AL.,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Selya, Circuit Judge,
Stahl, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Lipez, Circuit Judge.
Philip N. Beauregard, with whom John A. Markey, Jr. and
Beauregard, Burke & Franco were on brief, for appellants.
Curtis Diedrich, with whom Alan B. Rindler, Nadine Nasser
Donovan, Rindler•Morgan, P.C., William J. Davenport, Richard M.
Haley, Bloom & Buell, Stacey Morris, and Sloane & Walsh, LLP were
on consolidated brief, for individual appellees.
J. Peter Kelley, with whom Martin C. Foster and Foster &
Eldridge were on brief, for appellee Southcoast Health Systems,
Inc., d/b/a Charlton Memorial Hospital.
May 15, 2003
SELYA, Circuit Judge. This appeal requires us to explore
the limits of a trial judge's authority to remove a significant
piece of evidence from a jury's consideration based upon his belief
that the evidence lacks persuasive force.1 We conclude that, in
the circumstances of this case, the judge's actions invaded the
province of the jury. Because there is a reasonable likelihood
that the error influenced the eventual verdict, we vacate the
judgment as to the affected claims and remand the case for a new
trial.
I. BACKGROUND
On October 30, 1998, Betty Ann Blake, a profoundly
disabled woman in her mid-forties, was eating her mid-day meal at
a daycare facility. A piece of meat lodged in her throat. She was
taken to the emergency room at Charlton Memorial Hospital (the
Hospital) in Fall River, Massachusetts. Although laypersons
speculated that Betty Ann might be choking, she apparently refused
to open her mouth and the doctors on duty did not conduct a full
examination.
Betty Ann was admitted to the Hospital. The following
day, she had a seizure and began to display labored breathing. The
doctors performed an esophagoscopy. During the procedure, they
discovered a bolus of meat in Betty Ann's esophagus and dislodged
1
The district court used "persuasiveness" and "credibility" as
rough synonyms in connection with this ruling, and we too use those
terms as proxies for one another.
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it. Shortly thereafter, Betty Ann suffered a heart attack. She
died on November 1, 1998 (approximately twenty-four hours after
physicians removed the piece of meat from her esophagus). The
death certificate filed by the medical examiner listed
"complications of asphyxia by choking" as the cause of death.
Betty Ann's parents, William and Theresa Blake,
individually and as co-administrators of her estate, subsequently
sued the Hospital and a trio of physicians (Drs. Michael
Pellegrino, Miguel Brillantes, and Thomas Cahill). Their
complaint, filed in the federal district court, charged that the
defendants had negligently failed to diagnose Betty Ann's condition
and had discriminated against her in violation of Title III of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12181-12189,
and the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 701-796l. In the course
of pretrial proceedings, the district court dismissed the ADA claim
and granted summary judgment for the physician-defendants on the
Rehabilitation Act claim. The plaintiffs have not appealed from
those orders.
The case went to trial on the remaining counts, which
included the Rehabilitation Act claim against the Hospital, see 29
U.S.C. § 794, and state-law claims, grounded in malpractice, for
wrongful death and negligent infliction of emotional distress
against the physicians. At the start of the trial, the physician-
defendants moved in limine to exclude the death certificate. The
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court ruled that the death certificate constituted admissible
evidence and denied the motion. The plaintiffs promptly introduced
it into evidence and published it to the jury. The court then
allowed the jurors to inspect copies of the death certificate.
On the fifteenth day of trial, the plaintiffs rested.
The physician-defendants moved, inter alia, to strike the listed
cause of death from the death certificate. The plaintiffs
objected. On the seventeenth day of trial — before the defendants
had presented any evidence — the district judge excised the words
"asphyxia by choking" from the death certificate, stating that he
had come to believe that Betty Ann's death was "not caused by
'complications of asphyxia by choking' as that phrase was
understood either by a layperson or by physicians."2
The trial lasted another three days. After final
arguments and the court's charge, the jury commenced its
deliberations. On November 26, 2001, the jury returned a verdict
for the Hospital on the Rehabilitation Act count but informed the
court that it had reached an impasse on the remaining claims. The
court gave the deadlocked jurors a modified Allen charge, see Allen
2
The physician-defendants argued — and the court apparently
came to believe — that Betty Ann experienced an aspiration, not
asphyxia by choking. By aspiration, the defendants meant "the
effects of saliva going down into the lungs . . . which can lead to
infection, fluid in the lungs, and then death if left untreated."
Br. of the Physician-Appellees at 23. This was a more likely cause
of death than asphyxia, they posited, inasmuch as Betty Ann "did
not suffer an obstruction of her airway at any time when she was in
the hospital." Id.
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v. United States, 164 U.S. 492, 501 (1896); United States v. Keene,
287 F.3d 229, 235 (1st Cir. 2002), and directed them to resume
deliberations. On November 27, the jury returned an across-the-
board verdict for the defendants.
The plaintiffs filed a timely motion for a new trial.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(a). As to the state-law claims, they argued
that the district court had erred in redacting the death
certificate, and, moreover, that the timing of the court's actions
— allowing them to introduce the unredacted death certificate,
publish it to the jury, and build their case around it, and then
striking the pivotal language — had doomed their chances of
prevailing. As to the Rehabilitation Act claim, the plaintiffs
sought a new trial based on the district court's exclusion of
medical records of non-disabled patients. The lower court took the
matter under advisement. It eventually denied the motion in a
written opinion. See Blake v. Southcoast Health Sys., Inc., 206 F.
Supp. 2d 174 (D. Mass. 2002). The court insisted that none of its
actions constituted error. Id. at 182. With admirable candor,
however, the court conceded that if it had erred in the mid-trial
redaction of the death certificate, its error was not harmless
(and, thus, would require a new trial). Id. at 177. This appeal
ensued.
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II. THE STATE-LAW CLAIMS
The issue that lies at the heart of this appeal relates
to the trial court's handling of an evidentiary matter. When an
issue as to the admission or exclusion of evidence involves a
question of law, such as the proper interpretation of a provision
contained in the Federal Rules of Evidence, we afford de novo
review. Crowley v. L.L. Bean, Inc., 303 F.3d 387, 394 (1st Cir.
2002). When, however, the issue involves an application of a given
rule of evidence to particular facts or a judgment call about, say,
relevancy, we review solely for abuse of discretion. Id.
Identifying the precise question at issue in this appeal
poses certain complications. These complications arise primarily
from the parties' disagreement about whether federal or state law
governs the admissibility vel non of the death certificate. The
plaintiffs argue that state law controls because, by statute in
Massachusetts, a party is entitled not only to introduce an
official death certificate but also to have it serve as prima facie
evidence of the cause of death. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 46, § 19. In
the plaintiffs' view, the Federal Rules of Evidence "are not
intended to substitute for, or trump, a clear state substantive
right to have certain evidence admitted in a state tort death
claim." Br. of Appellants at 27. The defendants argue to the
contrary, asserting the primacy of the Federal Rules of Evidence.
See, e.g., Br. of Physician-Appellees at 25 ("The fact that a state
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statute also existed regarding the admissibility of the death
certificate [does] not trump the force of the Federal Rules of
Evidence."). Although this is an interesting pedagogical debate,
we do not resolve it here. Assuming arguendo that the Federal
Rules of Evidence govern — an assumption consistent with the
district court's position and optimally favorable to the defendants
— the district court's handling of the evidence, as we explain
below, does not pass muster.
A. The Error.
The fundamental question posed in this case implicates
the division of responsibility between judge and jury. It asks
whether a judge, presiding over a jury trial, may rule on the
admissibility of evidence based upon his view of the persuasiveness
of that evidence. In other words, may a trial judge refuse to
admit evidence simply because he does not believe the truth of the
proposition that the evidence asserts? In the circumstances of
this case, we answer that question in the negative.3
3
Of course, there are specific circumstances in which a trial
judge's view of the credibility of the evidence is an important
variable in the calculus of admissibility. The most obvious
example is in a so-called Daubert hearing. See Daubert v. Merrell
Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 597 (1993) (explaining that "the
Rules of Evidence . . . assign to the trial judge the task of
ensuring that an expert's testimony . . . rests on a reliable
foundation"); see also United States v. Sebaggala, 256 F.3d 59, 65-
66 (1st Cir. 2001) (discussing a trial court's considerable
latitude in the admission and exclusion of expert testimony under
Fed. R. Evid. 702). The case at hand does not fit within any of
these exceptions.
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The disputed evidence in this case — the cause of death
specified in the death certificate — was plainly relevant to the
issues before the court. See Fed. R. Evid. 401. Even so, a
district court has the authority to exclude relevant evidence for
various reasons. See, e.g., Fed. R. Evid. 403 (allowing the
exclusion of evidence if the court finds that its probative value
is substantially outweighed by its unfairly prejudicial effect, or
that the evidence would tend to confuse or mislead the jury). But
none of these mechanisms allows a trial judge to remove relevant
evidence from the jury's universe solely because he finds the
evidence unpersuasive. Perhaps more importantly, the trial judge
in this case did not invoke any of them. Indeed, the judge made it
very clear that persuasiveness (or the lack of it) was the
perceived problem. See Blake, 206 F. Supp. 2d at 177 (attributing
the decision to redact to the fact that "the Court was no longer
persuaded by the fair preponderance of the evidence that
'complications of asphyxia by choking' was the primary cause of
Betty Ann Blake's death"); id. at 176-77 ("As the trial progressed
. . . it became increasingly evident [to me] that, whatever had
caused the death of Betty Ann Blake after twenty-seven hours of
suffering, it was not 'complications of asphyxia by choking.'").
The question reduces, therefore, to whether, in the
absence of special circumstances, see supra note 3, a trial judge
has the authority to exclude evidence on the basis of his own
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belief as to the persuasiveness of that evidence. We conclude
that, in a jury trial, no such authority exists. After all, the
jury is the factfinder, and "the ultimate arbiter of the
persuasiveness of the proof must be the factfinder, not the
lawgiver." Greenburg v. P.R. Maritime Shipping Auth., 835 F.2d
932, 937 (1st Cir. 1987). This premise has gone unchanged over the
years. See, e.g., Gallick v. Baltimore & Ohio R.R. Co., 372 U.S.
108, 114-15 (1963); Tennant v. Peoria & Pekin Union Ry. Co., 321
U.S. 29, 35 (1944). "It is the jury, not the court, which is the
fact-finding body. It weighs the contradictory evidence and
inferences, judges the credibility of witnesses . . . and draws the
ultimate conclusions as to the facts." Boston & Me. R.R. v.
Cabana, 148 F.2d 150, 152 (1st Cir. 1945) (citing Tennant, 321 U.S.
at 35).
In arrogating unto itself the power to evaluate the
persuasiveness of the medical examiner's conclusion about the cause
of death, memorialized in the death certificate, the district court
adverted to Fed. R. Evid. 104(a) and Fed. R. Evid. 803(8) as the
wellsprings of its authority. Neither of these rules adequately
underpins the court's action.
Fed. R. Evid. 104(a) provides in pertinent part that
"[p]reliminary questions concerning . . . the admissibility of
evidence shall be determined by the court." This rule enables a
trial judge to decide whether foundational facts have been
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established (and, thus, whether particular pieces of evidence are
eligible for admission). See Sacramona v. Bridgestone/Firestone,
Inc., 106 F.3d 444, 446 (1st Cir. 1997). The trial court "act[s]
as a gatekeeper" when such issues arise. United States v.
Holmquist, 36 F.3d 154, 167 (1st Cir. 1994). "If the court
discerns enough support in the record to warrant a reasonable
person in determining that the evidence [could support that which
it sets out to support, then] the weight to be given to the
evidence is left to the jury." United States v. Paulino, 13 F.3d
20, 23 (1st Cir. 1994).
Rule 104(a) is inapposite here, for no foundational facts
were in issue. Virtually by definition, foundational facts are
those facts upon which the admissibility of evidence rests. See
United States v. Piper, 298 F.3d 47, 52 (1st Cir. 2002); Paulino,
13 F.3d at 23. Those facts include matters such as the genuineness
of a document or statement, the maker's personal knowledge, and the
like. See, e.g., Newton v. Ryder Transp. Servs., 206 F.3d 772, 775
(8th Cir. 2000); Ricketts v. City of Hartford, 74 F.3d 1397, 1410
(2d Cir. 1996); Onujiogu v. United States, 817 F.2d 3, 5 (1st Cir.
1987). In this instance, those facts (e.g., the authenticity of
the death certificate and the authority of the medical examiner to
sign it) were never in dispute. The district court's problem did
not go to any foundational fact, but, rather, to the very core of
the evidence: its persuasiveness. Where, as here, a piece of
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evidence rests upon a proper foundation, Rule 104(a) does not
permit a trial judge to usurp the jury's function and exclude the
evidence based on the judge's determination that it lacks
persuasive force.
The district court also suggested that Fed. R. Evid.
803(8) empowered it to redact the death certificate based on the
perceived lack of credibility. We do not agree. The rule provides
that public records are not excluded by the hearsay rule "unless
the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of
trustworthiness." Fed. R. Evid. 803(8). Trustworthiness in this
context refers to matters such as whether the evidence is self-
authenticating or contemporaneously compiled by a person of
adequate skill and experience. See Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey,
488 U.S. 153, 167 n.11 (1988); FDIC v. Houde, 90 F.3d 600, 606 (1st
Cir. 1996); see also Fed. R. Evid. 803 advisory comm. notes to ¶
(8), subsection (c). As the district court's explication makes
plain, the court did not base its ruling on the manner in which the
death certificate was completed, the sources of information
utilized, the credentials of the person completing it, or how the
record was maintained. Instead, the court premised its ruling on
the substance of what the death certificate contained. This was
error: Rule 803(8) does not authorize a trial court to deem
evidence untrustworthy (and thus inadmissible) simply because the
court finds the gist of the evidence incredible or unpersuasive.
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For these reasons, we conclude that the mid-trial
redaction of the death certificate, based on the district court's
assessment that it lacked credibility, constituted error.
B. Was the Error Harmless?
Our determination that the district court erred in
redacting the death certificate on the basis of a credibility
determination does not end our inquiry. That error necessitates a
new trial only if it affected the plaintiffs' substantial rights.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 61. The test for harmless error in this case
therefore depends on whether the erroneous exclusion of evidence
"result[ed] in actual prejudice because it had a substantial and
injurious effect or influence in determining the jury's verdict."
Ruiz-Troche v. Pepsi Cola Bottling Co., 161 F.3d 77, 87 (1st Cir.
1998) (citation omitted). Because this determination is context-
specific, Nieves-Villanueva v. Soto-Rivera, 133 F.3d 92, 102 (1st
Cir. 1997), we can sustain the instant verdict only if we can say
with fair assurance, after whole-record review, that the lower
court's mid-trial redaction of the death certificate did not
substantially affect the jury's ultimate decision. See Kotteakos
v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 765 (1946).
Applying this standard, we conclude that the error
requires vacation of the judgment on the state-law claims. We rest
this conclusion in substantial part on the district court's own
assessment of the situation. The court candidly described the
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essential role that the death certificate played in the plaintiffs'
presentation of their malpractice claims, calling the stricken
language "the centerpiece of the Blakes' theory." Blake, 206 F.
Supp. 2d at 176. The court went on to conclude that if its
redaction of the document entailed error, that error "was not
harmless." Id. at 177.
We do not take these conclusions lightly. Trials are, by
their nature, dynamic and highly nuanced affairs. The district
court had first-hand knowledge of the ebb and flow of the
proceedings — knowledge that cannot fully be replicated by reading
a cold appellate record. Consequently, we accord great respect to
its conclusion regarding the centrality of the redacted language.
See, e.g., United States v. Shay, 57 F.3d 126, 134 & n.7 (1st Cir.
1995). The court's appraisal of the effect of the redaction is
equally deserving of deference. See Long v. Cotrell, Inc., 265
F.3d 663, 667 (8th Cir. 2001) (noting that the trial court is in a
superior position to measure the effects of trial error); cf.
Whiting v. Westray, 294 F.3d 943, 944 (7th Cir. 2002) (deferring to
trial judge's determination of harmlessness of attorney misconduct
in ruling on motion for a new trial).
Here, moreover, the timing of the redaction — on the
seventeenth day of a twenty day trial and after the plaintiffs had
rested — magnifies the prejudice occasioned by the error. The
plaintiffs had gone out on a limb and built their case around the
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redacted language — a reasonable tactic, considering the district
court's denial of the defendants' motion in limine and its
unconditional admission of the death certificate into evidence.
The court then abruptly reversed direction and sawed the limb off
at the eleventh hour, bringing the plaintiffs' case down with it.
It is difficult to imagine a more prejudicial turn of events.4
To be sure, the district court attempted to ameliorate
the untoward effects of its about-face by instructing the jury not
to draw any conclusions based on the fact of the redaction. But
this is not a garden-variety instance of allowing a jury to see
tainted evidence and then excluding it. In the peculiar
circumstances of this case, we do not think that any curative
instruction would have sufficed.
The general rule is straightforward: courts "normally
presume that a jury will follow an instruction to disregard
inadmissible evidence inadvertently presented to it." Greer v.
Miller, 483 U.S. 756, 766 n.8 (1987). The exception to the general
rule is equally straightforward: the usual presumption does not
4
The district court might have mitigated the potential
prejudice had it taken a more cautious approach when considering
the motion in limine. For example, the court might have admitted
the evidence conditionally or withheld a ruling on the motion until
the case came into sharper focus. We hasten to add, however, that
we offer these suggestions principally for the guidance of other
courts in future cases — and we do so recognizing that hindsight is
always 20/20. "Trial judges, whose lot is often to make swift
battlefield decisions on tangled evidentiary matters, cannot be
expected to foretell the future with absolute accuracy." United
States v. Sepulveda, 15 F.3d 1161, 1184 (1st Cir. 1993).
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apply when there is an "overwhelming probability" that the
instruction will be ineffectual. Richardson v. Marsh, 481 U.S.
200, 208 (1987). Here, the likelihood is very great that the
removal of the evidence — what the district court termed "the
centerpiece" of the plaintiffs' case — was devastating. That is
enough to warrant a new trial. See Bruton v. United States, 391
U.S. 123, 135 (1968) (noting that "there are some contexts in which
the risk that the jury will not, or cannot, follow instructions is
so great, and the consequences of failure so vital to the [party
introducing the evidence], that the practical and human limitations
of the jury system cannot be ignored"); cf. Anderson v. Butler, 858
F.2d 16, 18 (1st Cir. 1988) (holding that when evidence is
promised, and then not received, jurors likely will draw a "heavy"
adverse inference from its non-appearance).
III. THE REHABILITATION ACT CLAIM
There is an additional matter that warrants our
attention. The jury found for the Hospital on the Rehabilitation
Act claim, and the notice of appeal also brings that aspect of the
judgment before us.
The Rehabilitation Act claim is structurally different
from the state-law malpractice claims, and the plaintiffs, on
appeal, have neither addressed any developed argumentation to this
aspect of the jury's verdict nor given any explanation as to how
the belated redaction of the death certificate prejudiced the
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presentation of their Rehabilitation Act claim. By the same token,
they have not pursued their claim of error in the exclusion of
relevant medical records. See supra.
It is a familiar rule in this circuit that when issues on
appeal are unaccompanied by some meaningful effort at developed
argumentation, they are deemed to have been abandoned. See, e.g.,
Ryan v. Royal Ins. Co., 916 F.2d 731, 734 (1st Cir. 1990); United
States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990). We therefore
affirm the judgment entered in favor of the Hospital on the
Rehabilitation Act claim.
To be sure, this removes from the framework of the case
the hook upon which federal jurisdiction originally hung and leaves
the district court, on remand, with only the state-law claims
against the physician-defendants. The district court nonetheless
has the option of retaining supplemental jurisdiction and
proceeding to retry the case. See Rodriguez v. Doral Mortgage
Corp., 57 F.3d 1168, 1177 (1st Cir. 1995) (holding that on remand
a district court has discretion, after assessing the totality of
the circumstances, to retain supplemental jurisdiction over state-
law claims "notwithstanding the . . . demise of all foundational
federal claims").
IV. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. We affirm the judgment in favor
of the Hospital on the Rehabilitation Act claim but vacate the
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judgment in favor of the physician-defendants on the state-law
claims and remand that aspect of the case for a new trial. By
redacting the operative cause of death language from the death
certificate on the ground that it lacked persuasive force, the
district court invaded the jury's province and thus exceeded the
scope of its discretion. Occurring, as it did, near the end of a
long trial, the probability is intolerably high that this error
unfairly caused the plaintiffs' trial strategy to boomerang and
contaminated the ensuing verdict on the state-law claims.
Let us be perfectly clear. We do not hold that the death
certificate must be admitted into evidence at a subsequent trial.
There may be grounds for its exclusion apart from the deficient
ground relied upon by the district court. See, e.g., Freeman v.
Package Mach. Co., 865 F.2d 1331, 1340 (1st Cir. 1988) (discussing
trial courts' wide discretion in admitting or excluding evidence
under Fed. R. Evid. 403). That question is not before us, however,
and we express no opinion on it. After all, "when a trial court
erroneously excludes evidence, and the exclusion meets the standard
criteria of harmfulness, the harm is not cured by a mere
possibility that other appropriate grounds for exclusion of the
same evidence may later be found to exist." Ruiz-Troche, 161 F.3d
at 88.
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The judgment in favor of Southcoast Health Systems, Inc.,
d/b/a Charlton Memorial Hospital is affirmed. The judgment in
favor of the physician-defendants is vacated and the case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Costs are awarded to the plaintiffs as against the physician-
defendants.
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