IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2016-CT-00818-SCT
CURTIS BROWN
v.
PROFESSIONAL BUILDING SERVICES, INC.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/24/2016
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JEFF WEILL, SR.
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: STEVEN HISER FUNDERBURG
JASON HOOD STRONG
ROBERT L. GIBBS
ROGER C. RIDDICK
CRAIG ROBERT SESSUMS
MARCIAL DAVIDSON FORESTER, III
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: STEVEN HISER FUNDERBURG
CRAIG ROBERT SESSUMS
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: JASON HOOD STRONG
ROBERT L. GIBBS
RICHARD BENJAMIN McMURTRAY
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/30/2018
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
BEAM, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Curtis Brown petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari, claiming the Mississippi
Court of Appeals erred in affirming the judgment entered by the Hinds County Circuit Court
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in favor of Professional Building Services (PBS). Brown claimed the trial court had abused
its discretion by admitting certain evidence and by instructing the jury with instructions to
which Brown had objected at trial.
¶2. Finding that the jury was instructed properly on this evidence and that the testimony
was provided by an expert qualified under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 702, we affirm the
judgment of the Court of Appeals, and we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶3. Brown was the former clubhouse manager at Colonial Country Club in Jackson,
Mississippi, which closed its doors in 2014. On September 28, 2012, Brown arrived at the
clubhouse around 5 p.m. to do a monthly inventory of the “19th Hole Lounge” and “the
grill”—a restaurant inside the clubhouse. That night, PBS employees also were at the
clubhouse, cleaning and vacuuming the grill area. Around 8:00 p.m., the PBS staff left,
leaving Brown alone in the clubhouse.
¶4. After finishing his reports, Brown walked around the clubhouse to make sure all of
the doors had been locked. Brown testified that, as he approached the grill, he noticed that
the overhead lights were off, that the lights were on behind the bar, in the pool area outside,
and in the hallway outside the grill. An ice cream machine, a soda machine, and beer signs
inside the grill also produced some light. Brown noted that, with this secondary lighting,
“[the grill] is never totally dark.” On cross-examination, Brown told PBS that there was
“quite a bit of light,” even though the overhead lights had been turned off.
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¶5. Brown testified that, “as soon as [he] made the turn” into the doorway of the grill, he
stumbled and fell over a chair positioned “right in the doorway.” He testified that his whole
body went over the chair, the chair turned over, and he hit the ground. He felt immediate pain
in his knees and face, then he passed out. When he woke up, he noticed his knees were
swollen, but there was no blood. He tried to stand up but fell and fainted again. When he
woke up a second time, Brown crawled to his phone and called his brother, who arrived at
the clubhouse to take him to St. Dominic Hospital.
¶6. On separate occasions at the hospital, and before he was given pain medication,
Brown told a doctor and a nurse that he had been injured when he hit a chair while running
up stairs at work. But he told Michael Barrett, Colonial’s general manager, that he had been
injured chasing a mouse through the grill. He later reiterated the mouse story to Grace
Owens, a bartender at the clubhouse. However, at trial, Brown testified that he did not
remember describing any of these alternative versions of the events.
¶7. At St. Dominic Hospital, Brown was diagnosed with a bilateral patellar tendon rupture
in both knees and underwent surgery for the injuries a few hours after he was admitted.
Brown spent three days recovering in the hospital; then, he was transferred to Methodist
Rehabilitation Hospital, where he had two more operations and spent more than two months
rehabilitating.
¶8. In December 2014, Brown filed a negligence action against PBS. When the trial
concluded on March 10, 2016, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant. After
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reviewing Brown’s post-trial motions, the circuit court denied Brown’s requests for relief and
entered a final judgment on the jury verdict.
¶9. Brown timely appealed, raising five issues. Therein, Brown argued that the trial judge
had abused his discretion by:
(1) overruling Brown’s objection to a photo of a chair in the doorway to the
grill,
(2) denying Brown’s request for a jury instruction that specifically mentioned
that the overhead lights in the grill were turned off,
(3) allowing a defense expert in biomechanics to testify that Brown’s claim
that he suffered bilateral patellar tendon ruptures by walking into a chair was
not “plausible,”
(4) excluding one answer from his treating physician’s deposition testimony
regarding the general possibility that there could be mistakes in medical
records, and
(5) by responding to a note from a juror with a general instruction to continue
deliberations.
Brown v. Prof’l Bldg. Servs., Inc., 2017 WL 4641265, at *1 (Miss. Ct. App. Oct. 17, 2017).
The Court of Appeals held that the trial court properly had ruled on Brown’s claims and
affirmed its ruling.1 The court first found issues (2), (4), and (5) to have been “well settled,
and [that] their discussion and application to the facts of this case would not add value to the
jurisprudence of this state.” Id. at *2. (citing Gen. Motors Corp. v. Jackson, 636 So. 2d 310,
1
Griffis, P.J., Carlton, Fair and Greenlee, JJ., concur. Westbrooks, J., dissents with
separate written opinion, joined by Lee, C.J., Irving, P.J., and Barnes, J. Tindell, J., Not
Participating.
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311 (Miss. 1992)). The court analyzed only issues (1) and (3) and discussed only the
photograph of a chair in the doorway of the grill and the admissibility of testimony by Dr.
Bain–“an expert witness in the field of biomechanics.” Id. at *5. Finding that the circuit
court appropriately had allowed the jury to consider both the photograph and Dr. Bain’s
testimony, the Court of Appeals affirmed the circuit court’s verdict, noting that “[t]he jurors
were capable of considering the photo and the uncomplicated testimony . . . without being
confused or misled.” Id. at *5.
¶10. Aggrieved, Brown petitioned this Court for a writ certiorari. We granted certiorari
to review whether the trial court erred in overruling Brown’s objection to certain
photographic evidence and expert testimony submitted by the defense.
DISCUSSION
I. Whether the trial court abused its discretion by allowing Exhibit
29 into evidence.
¶11. Before trial, Brown filed a motion in limine to exclude several pieces of evidence.
Now before this Court is Exhibit 29: a photograph taken by defense counsel several years
after the incident in an attempt to recreate the scene of the incident. The photograph was one
of many photographs admitted into evidence by the defense to show the jury what the grill
and doorway looked like. Unlike the other photographs, Exhibit 29 depicted a chair in the
doorway which supported Brown’s description of the scene on the night of the incident.
¶12. Exhibit 29’s recreation was based on a July 2014 statement that Brown had made to
his insurer with his counsel present, but later testimony conflicted with portions of the
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statement. The picture depicts a chair, similar to the one over which Brown claims he tripped,
positioned in the doorway of the grill. Both Brown and PBS agreed that the chair should
have been rotated 180 degrees from its position in the photograph. Brown also argued that
the chair should have been positioned in a different location in the doorway, but testimony
about the chair’s exact placement in the doorway changed several times throughout the
proceeding. At one point, Brown admitted that he did not see the chair at all prior to hitting
it.
¶13. As reiterated by the Court of Appeals, the standard of review for the trial court’s
admission and exclusion of evidence is abuse of discretion. Id. at *4 (citing Tunica Cty. v.
Matthews, 926 So. 2d 209 (Miss. 2006)). This Court has “long held that the admissibility
of photographs is within the sound discretion of the trial court and that the trial judge has
wide latitude and discretion.” Id. (quoting Nelson v. Phoenix of Hartford Ins., 318 So. 2d
839, 843 (Miss. 1975).
A. The Evidentiary Standard for a Recreation Photograph
¶14. Applying the analysis in Beasley v. State, the Court of Appeals concluded that “some
probative value is the only requirement needed to support a trial judge’s decision to admit
photographs into evidence.” Beasley v. State, 136 So. 3d 393, 401 (Miss. 2014). The court
determined that the Beasley holding was directly applicable in that “the photo was consistent
with and fairly depicted Brown’s recorded statement,” with minor “differences in the angle
and positioning of the chair” which “could be ‘carefully pointed out to the jury.’” Brown,
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2017 WL 4641265, at *4 (citations omitted). However, the photographs in Beasley do not
convey a scene and circumstances similar to the photograph presented in this case. In
Beasley, the photographs at issue depicted a “crime-scene and autopsy” and were taken soon
after the incident. Id. at 399. There, the Court had been charged with determining “whether
to admit particularly graphic photographs into evidence”—not whether an innocuous picture
of a chair, taken years after the incident, was admissible. Id. at 400. While some of its
principles could apply loosely to the matter before us, the holding of Beasley is not directly
on point to the issue before us.
¶15. Instead, Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad v. Golden offers a more applicable evidentiary
standard for photographic recreations. Golden dealt with photographs of the site where a
train accident had occurred hours earlier. Photographs of the actual accident were not
present in the record. Gulf, Mobile & Ohio R.R. v. Golden, 72 So. 2d 446, 450 (Miss. 1954).
In determining the admissibility of photographs of this nature, the Golden Court held:
The mere fact that a photograph was taken at a time different from that in
question does not render it inadmissible if the witness is able to verify it as a
substantial representation of the conditions as they existed at the time in
question. Nor does the fact that the conditions were somewhat changed before
the photograph was taken [render] the photograph inadmissible if the changes
were not material, and if the changes are carefully pointed out and brought to
the jury’s attention.
Id. (emphasis added). See also Nelson v. Phoenix of Hartford Ins., 318 So. 2d 839, 843
(Miss. 1975) (coming to a similar conclusion on the evidentiary standard for photographs of
a building destroyed by a hurricane).
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¶16. Brown was the only witness to his accident, but it was not an abuse of discretion to
find Brown’s testimony to have been a fair basis for the admission of the photographs.
Although inconsistencies in Brown’s statements existed regarding several specific aspects
of the photographs, the general premise of the incident remained consistent: late at night, he
walked into a chair sitting in the middle of the doorway. Therefore, this Court must
determine whether (1) the photographic recreation is a substantial representation of the
conditions as they existed at the time in question, and (2) whether the changes carefully were
pointed out and brought to the jury’s attention.
¶17. Both parties agree that the chair should have been rotated 180 degrees from what was
shown in Exhibit 29 and that there is contradictory evidence regarding where the chair should
have been placed in the doorway. Neither of these issues is material, and the photograph
stands as a substantial representation of the alleged accident. Moreover, both issues were
pointed out to the jury. Whether the chair was a few inches one way or the other, and whether
Brown hit the left or right arm of the chair, is inconsequential.
¶18. For the first time, Brown argues in his appellate brief that the lighting of Exhibit 29
was inaccurate. He argues that the picture was taken during the day but the incident happened
at night, and therefore the photograph was an inaccurate recreation of the incident. Brown
argues that his motion in limine challenged the “relevance, authenticity, and accuracy” of the
photograph, which preserved the lighting issue for review. We find this broad language was
insufficient to preserve the issue for review.
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¶19. During argument on the motion in limine and the subsequent trial objection, the
parties focused on the placement of the chair, the angle of the chair, and the “advantageous”
angle of the photograph; but there was never any discussion of the lighting of Exhibit 29.
Brown made clear, specific objections about the misplaced chair in the photograph, but he
never made specific objections about the lighting inaccuracies. As we previously have held,
objections “on one or more specific grounds constitutes a waiver of all other grounds.” Smith
v. State, 986 So. 2d 290, 290 (Miss. 2008) (quotation marks omitted).
¶20. In an even broader context, discussions regarding the inaccuracies of Exhibit 29
throughout the record focus exclusively on the chair. While there were several occasions
where Brown discussed the lighting of the grill in reference to other photographs that
recreated the accident, he never addressed lighting or it discrepancies during discussions of
Exhibit 29. These discussions about the lighting in other photographs show that Brown was
aware that the photographs taken by defense counsel had been brightly lit and that they had
been inconsistent with alleged lighting at the time of the incident. But he never raised this
point in a discussion about Exhibit 29, nor did he ever suggest that he took issue with this
inaccuracy.
¶21. Objecting to the “relevance, authenticity, and accuracy”of the photograph was not a
sufficient indication that the judge should have taken into account the photograph’s lighting
when considering whether it was a substantial representation of the scene it was meant to
portray. Without more, the judge could not reasonably have known that lighting was an issue
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during the trial process. Therefore, the lighting inaccuracy was not preserved, and it is
procedurally barred on appeal.
¶22. With this bar, the only issues before this Court concerning the photograph are
Brown’s claims of an erroneous camera angle and placement of the chair. Despite those
inaccuracies, the photograph was a substantial representation of the incident and its
inaccuracies were explained to the jury. As a result, we find that the court did not abuse its
discretion in admitting Exhibit 29 into evidence.
B. The Court Order on Exhibit 29
¶23. In his order responding to Brown’s motion in limine to exclude Exhibit 29 from
evidence, the trial judge acknowledged that the scene of the incident was no longer
accessible. With that in mind, he held that “the Court will permit the Defendant to offer one
photo including the slight chair placement inaccuracy, but the inaccuracy shall be explained
to the jury, either through witness testimony or through an agreed stipulation, so as to avoid
any confusion to the jury.” The trial court later allowed the photograph to be shown to the
jury during defense counsel’s opening argument.
¶24. The trial court provided two avenues for the photograph’s admission as evidence,
allowing it to be explained to the jury through either witness testimony or agreed stipulation.
The parties did not stipulate to an explanation, so clarification via witness testimony was the
only avenue by which the evidence could be admitted. The Court of Appeals’ dissent argued
that the defense’s “brief explanation of the recreated picture to the jury [during open
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argument] does not comport to the trial judge’s order regarding the admissibility of the
photo.” While this is accurate, the dissent overlooked Brown’s witness testimony that served
to explain the inaccuracies to the jury. The defense’s cross-examination of Brown clearly
addresses the two core inaccuracies, as discussed in the above section of this opinion:
Q. All right. So tell me, other than the chair being turned the wrong way, is the
chair located where it was on September 28, 2012, around 8:00, 8:15, 8:30?
A. No it’s not.
...
Q. Okay. So tell me where the chair was.
A. The arm was turned – the arm to the chair was turned towards the bar.
Q. Okay.
A. And it was closer to the door. The back padding of the chair was on the
door – closer to the door.
¶25. Notably, Brown offered statements throughout discovery that conflicted with this
testimony, stating specifically that he did not see the chair prior to hitting it. However, the
court’s order required only that the photograph’s inaccuracy be “explained”; it did not require
the explanation to be consistent with all other testimony. Furthermore, although Brown’s
explanation of the inaccuracies in the photograph occurred after the photograph was used by
the defense, the order did not specify that the explanation of the inaccuracies needed to be
done before it was admitted. It simply stated that “the inaccuracy shall be explained to the
jury.” We find that admission of the photograph into evidence complied with the trial court’s
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order on the motion in limine.
II. Whether the trial court abused its discretion by finding Dr. Bain’s
testimony admissible.
¶26. PBS called Dr. Charles Bain to testify as an expert witness about the biomechanics
of Brown’s alleged chair collision. Dr. Bain received his undergraduate degree in nuclear
engineering from the Royal Military College of Canada and his medical degree from Queen’s
University of Canada. After medical school, he practiced family and emergency medicine in
Canada for nineteen years. Over the thirteen years leading up to trial, he worked as a
consultant and expert witness for Biodynamic Research Corporation. He also coauthored six
published articles in biodynamics and was an adjunct professor at the United States Air Force
School of Aerospace Medicine, where he taught flight surgeons about injury mechanisms.
¶27. Dr. Bain was brought in by the defense to conduct an “injury causation analysis,”
which analyzed the likelihood that the alleged impact with the chair caused the bilateral
patellar tendon ruptures. Dr. Bain did not do any simulations specifically tethered to the facts
of this case and instead, discussed studies outlining the type and severity of incidents that
typically result in a bilateral patellar tendon rupture. Dr. Bain compared those findings to
Brown’s alleged accident.
¶28. Dr. Bain testified that walking into and falling over a chair is inconsistent with causes
the patellar of tendon rupture. He testified that motion such as “running vigorously,” then
suddenly stopping, is a common cause of a patellar tendon rupture in an “essentially healthy
tendon.” He also noted that activities like weightlifting also can create enough force to
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rupture the tendon. He concluded that it was “highly unlikely” that Brown’s injury had been
caused by his falling over a chair.
¶29. The admissibility of expert testimony is governed by Mississippi Rule of Evidence
702, which states:
A witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience,
training, or education may testify in the form of an opinion or otherwise if:
(a) the expert’s scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will help
the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue;
(b) the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data;
(c) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods; and
(d) the expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to the facts of the
case.
Miss. R. Evid. 702. See also Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm. Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 592, 113
S. Ct. 2786, 125 L. Ed. 2d 469 n.10 (1993).
¶30. Here, the parties do not dispute that Dr. Bain’s qualifications and specialized
knowledge rendered his testimony admissible in this case. Rather, Brown takes issue with
whether Dr. Bain’s testimony was based on sufficient facts or data and whether the testimony
was the product of reliable principles and methods. “When reviewing a trial court’s decision
to allow or disallow evidence, including expert testimony, we apply an abuse of discretion
standard.” Illinois Cent. R.R. Co. v. Brent, 133 So. 3d 760, 779 (Miss. 2007). “Unless this
Court concludes that a trial court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence was arbitrary and
clearly erroneous, that decision will stand.” Id. We find no error in allowing Dr. Bain’s
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testimony.
¶31. Brown argued that Dr. Bain’s conclusions were “sheer conjecture.” Throughout trial
and the subsequent appellate briefs, Brown attacked the sources that Dr. Bain
used—primarily consisting of orthopedic journals—as insufficient to reach his conclusions.
He also argued that Dr. Bain never conducted any tests or simulations about whether walking
into a chair could result in a bilateral patellar tendon rupture. However, Brown did not object
to Dr. Bain’s testimony until the end of the third day of trial, so the record provides very little
guidance on these claims. Responding to Brown’s late objection, the trial court noted:
The plaintiff has been on notice for nearly five months of Dr. Bain’s
qualifications, opinions and methodology used in forming those opinions,
which even included a multipage document detailing the other cases where he
has provided expert testimony. Despite the notice, the plaintiff raised for the
first time an objection concerning Dr. Bain yesterday.
Nothing in the record confirms that Dr. Bain’s sources were sufficient to back his claims, but
the record also does not provide enough evidence to suggest that the sources were lacking
a scientific basis. With no other information available in the record, we rely upon the
testimony that these articles came from “orthopedic journals.” Such testimony is, at face
value, consistent with other articles about the forces that might cause a bilateral patellar
tendon rupture. Finding no contradictory evidence presented to suggest that these articles
lacked a scientific basis, there is nothing to clearly prove that the trial court erred in finding
that Dr. Bain’s testimony was based on sufficient facts and was the product of reliable
principles and methods.
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¶32. While the strength of Dr. Bain’s sources is unclear, the record indicates that Dr. Bain
reliably applied the principles and methods to the facts of the case. His conclusions were not
“sheer conjecture.” His testimony first described the sorts of injuries that normally cause a
bilateral patellar tendon rupture and clarified that such an injury requires a powerful force
for it to occur. Then, he turned to Brown’s collision with the chair and explained that the type
and caliber of force in that collision were inconsistent with the causes of a tendon rupture,
making it “highly unlikely” that Brown’s injury had been caused by his falling over a chair.
¶33. Brown’s final argument under this issue is that Dr. Bain failed to conduct any
simulations or visit the scene of Brown’s alleged accident to take measurements. Brown
claims that such testing was necessary in this case because he “flipped” over the chair,
making this more than just a simple fall. But Dr. Bain’s testimony focused largely on the
finding that Brown’s accident did not involve the type of impact that would cause a bilateral
patellar tendon rupture and that hitting the chair would not have created enough force to
cause the injury. Brown provides no reasonable explanation regarding why his having flipped
over the chair would necessitate a simulation. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its
discretion on this ground either.
¶34. With nothing in the record indicating that Dr. Bain’s testimony deviated from the
requirements of Mississippi Rule of Evidence 702, or that a simulation of the incident was
necessary in this case, Brown failed to support his objections to the admission of Dr. Bain’s
testimony. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence.
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CONCLUSION
¶35. We hold that the Court of Appeals properly affirmed the circuit court’s decision to
allow the jury to consider the photograph marked as Exhibit 29 and Dr. Bain’s expert
testimony in its deliberations. Finding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion, we
affirm the judgments of the Hinds County Circuit Court and the Court of Appeals.
¶36. AFFIRMED.
WALLER, C.J., RANDOLPH, P.J., COLEMAN, MAXWELL, CHAMBERLIN
AND ISHEE, JJ., CONCUR. KING, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN
OPINION JOINED BY KITCHENS, P.J.
KING, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
¶37. Because defense counsel was allowed to introduce an inaccurate and irrelevant staged
photograph of the scene of the incident and because Brown sufficiently objected to the
inaccuracies of the photograph, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s conclusion that the
trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the recreated photograph into evidence.
¶38. Brown’s complaint alleged that employees of Professional Business Services (PBS)
failed to place chairs in their proper positions under the tables and turned off the lights in the
grill room, creating a dangerous condition that caused Brown to suffer physical harm. Thus,
the lighting in the grill room, the visibility of the chair, and the position of the chair were
major points of contention in Brown’s case. However, several years after the incident
occurred, counsel for defense staged the inside of the doorway and took photographs of the
chair during daylight hours and from an optimum angle.
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¶39. Although the majority finds that Brown failed to object that the lighting in the
recreation photograph was inaccurate, I disagree. Counsel for Brown filed a motion in limine
to exclude any attempt to publish photographs to the jury of the accident scene that had been
taken by defense counsel as an alleged recreation of the accident scene. In the motion, Brown
argued that the angles and positioning of the room and the chair were not accurate and that
the scene had been photographed deliberately to favor PBS. At the hearing on the matter,
Brown argued that the recreation photographs should be excluded because: 1) the pictures
were taken by defense counsel; and 2) the photographs were not accurate and did not recreate
the accident scene as it existed. Brown pointed out that the scene in the photographs had been
staged to obtain an advantage demonstrated by the direction the chair had been turned and
how the chair appear from the angle in the hallway. Defense counsel admitted that the chair
had been turned the wrong way. Brown’s counsel then stated:
It’s a picture, so it’s significant, you know. There’s some cliche about what a
picture is worth compared to our ability to explain that it’s wrong. To his credit
counsel admits that he made a mistake and it’s not even positioned correctly,
according to what we understand. So now they’re contemplating showing a
picture to the jury for them to look at, that shows something that’s not
accurate. And we’re not sure why it’s relevant anyway. We’re not sure why
they need it. It’s certainly nothing that their experts have hinged any sort of
opinion on or anything else. So I’m not certain why it’s so crucial to bring it
in. But if they contend it is, it at leas[t] has to be an accurate representation.
¶40. During opening statement, Brown’s attorney again objected to the photograph, stating:
“He’s using one picture that vividly is not an accurate representation.” The trial court
overruled the objection. Defense counsel then was allowed to state to the jury: “I went to
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Colonial but the club had been closed at that point. And I put a chair right in the doorway.
And that’s the chair (indicating). Now, I messed up. The chair should – you see how it’s
facing right? It should be facing the left. And that’s on me. But the only difference is the
chair should be rotated 180 degrees and facing left instead of facing right. . . . And I submit
to you, because anyone as they walk down the hallway, if there’s a chair right in the doorway
like that, you can see it. You’re not going to trip over that chair.” After Brown’s testimony,
Brown’s counsel once more renewed the objection to the recreated photograph. Counsel for
Brown contended that the chair was incorrectly placed and that the jury had sat through an
entire cross-examination “having that image in their brain of a chair in a doorway that they’re
going to in closing argue the [plaintiff] should have seen, when it’s just a fabrication. . . .”
¶41. I believe that Brown’s repeated objections regarding the accuracy of the photograph
encompassed all issues that were not accurately portrayed, including the lighting in the grill
room and during daylight hours. Counsel for Brown repeatedly objected that the photograph
inaccurately portrayed the scene at the time of the incident. Brown also argued that the
photograph was irrelevant and unauthentic. This language was broad enough to encompass
the entirety of the inaccuracies of the photograph, including the lighting. Because the
photograph was taken in daylight with the lights in the grill room on, because the photograph
was taken at an inaccurate angle to show maximum visibility of the chair in the doorway, and
because the photograph incorrectly portrayed the position of the chair, I believe the trial court
abused its discretion in allowing the photograph to be introduced into evidence.
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¶42. This Court, in Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company v. Golden, 72 So. 2d 446,
450 (Miss. 1954), stated that the rule for photographs is that:
“Before a photograph may be admitted into evidence, it must be shown by
extrinsic evidence to be a true and faithful representation of the place or
subject it purports to represent as it existed at a time pertinent to the inquiry.”
32 C.J.S., Evidence, § 715, page 620. The material inquiry is whether or not
the photograph is a fair and accurate reproduction and representation of
conditions as they existed at the time of the collision involved.
The Court continued that “the mere fact that a photograph was taken at a time different from
that in question does not render it inadmissible if the witness is able to verify it as a
substantial representation of the conditions as they existed at the time in question.” Id.
(emphasis added).
¶43. In Givens v. State, 618 So. 2d 1313, 1318 (Miss. 1993), this Court again affirmed the
trial court’s decision to refuse to admit photographs in evidence because the photographs
“had great potential for confusing the jury as to the conditions which actually existed on the
night in question.” The defendant in that case had been arrested at night for tossing a plastic
bag of crack cocaine from his pocket to the ground while a police officer had been shining
his “stream light” on the defendant. Id. at 1315. The eight-month time lapse between the
arrest and the photographs being taken did not concern the Court. Id. at 1318. Instead, the
witness testimony showed that the conditions in the photographs were not substantially
similar to the conditions on the night of the arrest. Id. The photographs taken by the defense
failed to show a “stream light” flashlight on the defendant and failed to show the exact
location where the defendant had been standing. Id. at 1316. Thus, the Court noted that the
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photographs had the potential to confuse the jury. Id. at 1317.
¶44. As in Givens, the differences in the witness testimony of the incident and the staged
photograph had the potential for confusing and prejudicing the jury. Rule 403 of the
Mississippi Rules of Evidence states that the trial court may exclude evidence “if its
probative value is substantially outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair prejudice [or]
misleading the jury.” Here, the photograph was taken during daylight hours with full
overhead lighting in the grill room and was taken from an extreme angle designed to show
maximum visibility of the chair in the doorway. Brown testified that he had been walking
along the right-hand side of the wall when he turned right and tripped over the chair.
However, defense counsel took a photograph of the chair from the opposite side of the wall,
making the chair clearly visible in the picture. The defendant also was allowed to publish the
inaccurate photograph to the jury in opening argument, without a foundation, and without a
sponsoring witness. In addition, defense counsel was allowed to say during opening
statement that, “if there is a chair right in the doorway like that, you can see it. You are not
going to trip over that chair.” I would find that any probative value of the introduction of the
photograph was substantially outweighed by a danger of unfair prejudice and of misleading
the jury.
¶45. Moreover, I believe that the staged photograph was irrelevant and thus inadmissible
pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Evidence 402. Rule 402 states that “irrelevant evidence is not
admissible.” M.R.E. 402. Defense counsel had taken several photographs of the grill room,
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the hallway leading to the grill room, and the doorway, making the introduction of the staged
photograph of the chair into evidence unnecessary. PBS could have argued its case
sufficiently by introducing the nonprejudicial photographs of the chair, grill room, and
doorway.
¶46. Brown’s case rested on the contention that a combination of the misplaced chair, in
addition to the darkened room, created a dangerous condition that caused Brown to suffer
injuries. Brown repeatedly objected to the recreated photograph, arguing that it “sets a staged
scene and is not an accurate depiction of the incident scene.” I believe that Brown’s
objections to the inaccuracy of the photograph sufficiently encompassed the lighting issue
for review. Therefore, I would find that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing the
introduction of a staged photograph of the chair in the doorway from an advantageous angle,
in daylight, and with the lights on in the grill room, would reverse the trial court’s decision,
and the decision of the Court of Appeals and would remand this case for a new trial.
KITCHENS, P.J., JOINS THIS OPINION.
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