IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2018-CA-00565-SCT
MARY EDWARDS
v.
COCA COLA BOTTLING COMPANY UNITED,
INC., AND WILLIE LEE, JR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/06/2018
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. CHRISTOPHER LOUIS SCHMIDT
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: GEORGE W. HEALY, IV
WILBUR PEMBLE DELASHMET
ROY A. NOWELL, JR.
MATTHEW JOSEPH O’GORMAN
J. HEATH SULLIVAN
JACOB D. KING
VICKI R. LEGGETT
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST JUDICIAL
DISTRICT OF HARRISON COUNTY
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: J. HEATH SULLIVAN
JACOB D. KING
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES: VICKI R. LEGGETT
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 03/07/2019
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE KITCHENS AND KING, P.JJ., AND BEAM, J.
KITCHENS, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Mary Edwards sued Coca-Cola Bottling Company United, Inc. (Coca-Cola), and
Willie Lee, Jr., for back injuries sustained when, while shopping at Wal-Mart, she was struck
by a cart driven by Lee as he stocked shelves with soft drinks. The Circuit Court of the First
Judicial District of Harrison County dismissed Edwards’s lawsuit with prejudice after finding
that she had misrepresented her injuries during discovery. Edwards appeals, arguing that her
failure to disclose prior back problems in her discovery responses either did not amount to
a discovery violation that such failure merited a sanction less severe than dismissal. Edwards
also argues that, because no genuine issue of material fact existed about whether Lee’s
breach of the duty of care proximately caused her injuries, the trial court erred by denying
her motion for summary judgment on liability. Because the trial court was within its
discretion in dismissing Edwards’s case on the basis of her discovery violation, we affirm.
FACTS
¶2. Edwards filed a complaint against Coca-Cola and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., alleging that,
on August 31, 2013, she had been struck by a cart operated by a Coca-Cola vendor, Willie
Lee, Jr., as he stocked shelves. Later, Edwards filed a first amended complaint, adding Lee
as a defendant. In its answer Coca-Cola admitted that it was responsible for Lee’s actions
taken in the course and scope of his employment, but it denied any negligence. Thereafter,
Wal-Mart was dismissed from the action.
¶3. Edwards described the accident in her deposition. She testified that, while shopping
at Wal-Mart with family members, she squatted down to look at baby food on a low shelf,
and a cart struck her in the right hip, causing her to fall. When she righted herself and
attempted to stand, the cart struck her a second time, also in the right hip. She testified that
she had not seen the cart prior to the accident. Edwards testified that she felt pain in her hip
immediately, and the pain spread to her lower back. She testified that Lee had been wearing
earbuds and had failed to notice that he had struck someone with his cart. She said that the
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accident had caused injuries to her middle and lower back. Edwards visited an emergency
room after leaving Wal-Mart.
¶4. In his deposition, Lee testified that he was using a U-boat cart to stock shelves on an
aisle in Wal-Mart. He testified that a U-boat cart is a six-wheeled cart controlled by the
driver’s arms using vertical handles. Lee testified that when he rotated the cart to get it out
of the way of customer traffic, he could feel that the cart had bumped someone. Although he
was aware that he had struck someone, Lee continued stocking shelves because he did not
believe that the collision had been a big one. He admitted that, before rotating the cart, he had
failed to look near the baby food aisle to see whether anyone was in the way. He denied that
he had been wearing earbuds.
¶5. Edwards’s treating physician, Dr. Richard Gorman, testified in deposition that, to a
reasonable degree of medical probability, the accident had caused Edwards to suffer an
annular tear in the lower back at L-5, S-1, and a disc protrusion in the middle back at T-7.The
defendants submitted a supplemental interrogatory answer with the opinion of Dr. Eric
Wolfson, a neurosurgeon, that Edwards had sustained a lumbar muscular strain in the
accident that should have resolved in six to twelve weeks. He opined that the disc problems
identified by Dr. Gorman were due to degenerative disc disease, not trauma. Dr. Wolfson
reached these conclusions based on the records of Edwards’s emergency room visit the day
of the accident, which documented that a full examination of her back revealed a full range
of motion, no midline tenderness, no muscle spasm, no trauma to the back, and a negative
straight-leg raise test.
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¶6. While discovery was ongoing, Coca-Cola and Lee filed a motion to dismiss on the
basis of discovery violations by Edwards. Coca-Cola alleged that Edwards’s interrogatory
responses and deposition testimony about her medical history conflicted with her medical
records. In her interrogatory answers, Edwards had said that, while she suffers from multiple
sclerosis for which she had been placed on Social Security disability, she never had
experienced injuries similar to those she sustained in the Wal-Mart accident. She did reveal
a workers’ compensation claim for a broken rotator cuff between 1999 and 2001. She said
that due to the back injuries from the accident, she has trouble with household chores, she
cannot lift her small grandchildren, and she cannot fish with her son. These limitations,
according to Edwards, have caused her debilitating mental and emotional stress. She filed
a second supplemental answer to interrogatories that updated her initial interrogatory
response in which she had denied any similar injuries before the accident. In the second
supplemental answer, Edwards said she had seen a chiropractor in 2004 for her hip.
¶7. During Edwards’s deposition, defense counsel reminded her that she could consult her
attorney at any time and that “I don’t know” and “I don’t remember” were acceptable
answers. Edwards testified in deposition that since the accident at Wal-Mart, she suffered
with middle and lower back pain. She testified that, before the accident, she never had any
problems with her middle back. She said she never had sought medical care for pain or
limitations in motion in her middle back before the accident. She also said she had not seen
a medical provider for any complaints of middle back pain before the accident. Regarding
her lower back, Edwards said she had seen a chiropractor for “a twisted pelvic” in 2004, but
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otherwise had seen no medical providers for any problem with her lower back before the
accident. She denied ever having had any problems or complaints of pain or limitation of
motion regarding her lower back before the accident. And she denied having sought medical
care or treatment for any lower back problems before the accident. She testified that, before
August 2013, she had “never really had a back problem.” And she said that, before the
accident, no one had ever told her she had disc problems in her back.
¶8. Edwards signed a medical authorization that allowed Coca-Cola access to her medical
records. Several of those medical records, summarized below, showed that, in fact, Edwards
had a history of problems with her middle and lower back.
! On April 3, 2005, Edwards presented to the UrgiCare Center with
fever, congestion, and back pain that she had been experiencing for
three days.
! A November 1, 2005, record from the Patterson Medical & Diagnostic
Center noted a history of bulging discs in Edwards’s neck and back.
! In a January 8, 2007, record from Logan Family Practice, Edwards
complained of neck pain that radiated to her middle back.
! On February 21, 2007, Edwards visited Logan again complaining of
middle back pain, among other complaints.
! On May 30, 2007, Edwards was treated at Logan for pain in her left hip
radiating into her back and low back pain. An examination revealed
“[n]o pain in lower back; does have pain over the left hip.” She was
diagnosed with bursitis in the hip and degenerative joint disease in the
neck.
! In another Logan record from June 8, 2007, Edwards complained of
back pain and hip pain.
5
! In records from Northcrest Medical Center on September 26, 2007,
Edwards complained that she had seen “Dr. Anderson yesterday and he
was going down my spine and pushing and I guess he hit something.
My back hurts.” Her pain assessment was 8, and she described the pain
as located in her middle back. Another note from that visit indicates
that Edwards said she has three bulging discs in her back and two in her
neck for which she was seeing a different neurologist in another state.
The clinic prescribed painkillers for Edwards’s back pain.
! On October 15, 2007, Edwards saw Dr. W. Lewis, who reported her
history as multiple sclerosis and back pain that Edwards described as
inadequately controlled and aggravated by degenerative disc disease.
On examination, “[i]t is tender to palpate the lower back in all areas.”
! On November 1, 2007, Edwards returned to Northcrest reporting that,
after falling on a sloped embankment, her left knee and back were sore.
The record notes a history of degenerative disc disease and a disc
herniation. She underwent an X-ray of the lumbar spine.
! Northcrest records from January 7, 2008, February 9, 2008, and
February 17, 2008, note a medical history of multiple sclerosis and back
pain.
! Medical records from Memorial Hospital show Edwards presented
complaining of back pain in addition to neck pain and headache.
¶9. Coca-Cola questioned Dr. Gorman about these medical records in his deposition. Dr.
Gorman testified that he had treated Edwards for multiple sclerosis from 2005 to the present,
and she never had reported any middle or lower back problems before the accident. He first
examined Edwards for her injuries from the accident on November 11, 2013. He said that,
after the accident, Edwards had problems bending, stooping, and walking, but that she had
experienced difficulty with these activities before the accident due to her multiple sclerosis.
Dr. Gorman minimized the significance of the back problems noted in Edwards’s pre-
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accident records because none showed radicular symptoms or symptoms that had persisted
long enough to prompt any provider to order an MRI scan or to recommend surgery.
¶10. Edwards filed a reply to the motion to dismiss, contending that she had not wilfully
or intentionally violated discovery rules. She maintained that, at worst, she had failed to
remember minor medical treatment for her back from nearly a decade before her discovery
responses. To show that she had lacked intent to obfuscate her medical history, she pointed
to her execution of a medical authorization allowing the defendants full access to her medical
records. Also, she averred that, after her deposition, she had changed attorneys. Edwards
noted that, during Dr. Gorman’s deposition, her former counsel, who had been representing
her at that time, said he did not have a copy of her medical records at the deposition. She
argued her lawyer’s statement showed that he never brought the medical records to her
attention to refresh her recollection before the deposition.
¶11. Edwards also filed a motion for summary judgment on liability, arguing that no
genuine issue of material fact existed that Coca-Cola and Lee had breached a duty owed her
and that the breach of duty was the proximate cause of her injuries. The defendants
responded, arguing that genuine issues of material fact existed due to the discrepancies in the
testimony of Edwards and Lee about how the accident occurred, as well as a grainy video
that purported to depict the accident.1 Edwards filed a rebuttal to the defendants’ response.
¶12. After a hearing on the defendants’ motion to dismiss and Edwards’s summary
judgment motion, the trial court granted the motion to dismiss and entered a judgment of
1
We note that, because of the poor quality of the video, nothing helpful can be
observed.
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dismissal with prejudice under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 37. The trial court found
that Edwards had been directly asked in the interrogatories whether she ever had experienced
a prior injury in any way similar to the injury claimed in her complaint, and that in her sworn
responses, she said that she had not. And in her deposition, she repeated this testimony,
denying that she ever had experienced any pain or limitations concerning her lower or middle
back prior to the accident and denying that she had seen a medical provider for any problem
with her middle or lower back. She also testified that no one ever had told her she had
problems with a disc in her back. Later, she supplemented her interrogatory responses to
include a hip injury from 2004. The trial court also noted that Edwards never had told Dr.
Gorman that she had any problems with her middle or lower back before the accident. The
trial court recited the myriad medical records showing that Edwards had, in fact, experienced
prior middle and lower back problems for which she had received medical treatment.
¶13. In its analysis, the trial court applied the factors from Pierce v. Heritage Properties,
Inc., 688 So. 2d 1385 (Miss. 1997), and found that Edwards’s provision of false responses
to interrogatories and deposition questions was “the result of willfulness and/or bad faith, and
not from her alleged lack of recollection.” The trial court found that Edwards’s false
responses were a deliberate attempt to keep evidence from the court and to hide the truth.
And the trial court found that lesser sanctions than dismissal would allow Edwards to get
away with lying under oath and would, therefore, not achieve the deterrent value of
dismissal. Rejecting Edwards’s contention that her false answers were due to lack of
memory or her attorney’s failure to refresh her recollection, the trial court found her answers
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unambiguous and purely the product of dishonesty. The trial court found that her conduct
substantially had prejudiced Coca-Cola and Lee and that it would force them to retake
Edwards’s deposition and to take other depositions. Additionally, the trial court found that
Edwards’s conduct necessitated an exhaustive multistate search for additional medical
records, requiring Coca-Cola and Lee to spend extra time and resources in the process. The
trial court found that, although dismissal with prejudice was the harshest sanction available,
“no other sanction [would] meet the demands of justice.” The same day, the trial court
entered an order denying Edwards’s motion for summary judgment. Edwards appeals both
rulings.
DISCUSSION
I. Whether the trial court’s dismissal of the action as a sanction for
a discovery violation was an abuse of discretion.
A. Standard of Review
¶14. This Court reviews the trial court’s dismissal of an action for a discovery violation for
abuse of discretion. Ashmore v. Miss. Auth. on Educ. Television, 148 So. 3d 977, 981
(Miss. 2014). We begin with a determination of whether the trial court applied the correct
legal standard. Pierce, 688 So. 2d at 1388. If so, then we consider whether the trial court’s
“decision was one of several reasonable ones which could have been made.” Id. We will
affirm “unless there is a definite and firm conviction that the [trial] court . . . committed a
clear error of judgment in the conclusion it reached upon weighing of relevant factors.” Id.
(quoting Cooper v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 568 So. 2d 687, 692 (Miss. 1990)). This
Court also has said that it “should engage in ‘measured restraint in conducting appellate
9
review’ and should not decide whether it would have dismissed the original action but
whether dismissal amounted to clear error.” Kinzie v. Belk Dept. Stores, L.P., 164 So. 3d
974, 977 (Miss. 2015).
B. Discussion
¶15. Pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 372 and a trial court’s inherent power
to protect the integrity of the judicial process, trial courts have broad discretionary authority
in discovery matters, including the power to dismiss an action. Miss. R. Civ. P. 37. Pierce,
688 So. 2d at 1388. In the seminal case concerning false testimony given in discovery,
Pierce, the plaintiff had said under oath that she had been alone when a ceiling fan dropped
from the ceiling onto her person, causing injuries. In her interrogatory answers, deposition
testimony, and testimony at a first trial, she repeatedly maintained that she had been alone
at the time of the incident. Id. at 1387. But those representations were lies. Id. at 1388. After
the first trial, the defendants discovered that Pierce had not been alone at the time of the
incident; rather, her boyfriend had been present. Id. The defendants moved to dismiss on the
2
Rule 37(b)(2)(C) provides, in pertinent part, that
If a party or an officer, director, or managing agent of a party or a person
designated under Rules 30(b)(6) or 31(a) to testify in behalf of a party fails to
obey an order to provide or permit discovery, including an order made under
subsection (a) of this rule, the court in which the action is pending may make
such orders in regard to the failure as are just, and among others the
following:
....
an order striking out pleadings or parts thereof, or staying further proceedings
until the order is obeyed, or dismissing the action or proceeding or any part
thereof, or rendering a judgment by default against the disobedient party[.]
10
basis of the false testimony. Id. Pierce, in a second deposition, testified that she had not
meant to deceive the court with her falsehood but that she had lied in order to hide from her
parents the fact that she had an unsanctioned male overnight guest. Id. The trial court found
that the discovery violation warranted dismissal with prejudice. Id.
¶16. In affirming the dismissal, this Court emphasized the importance of truthful responses
to discovery. Id. at 1389. “An implicit condition in any order to answer an interrogatory is
that the answer be true, responsive and complete. A false answer is in some ways worse than
no answer; it misleads and confuses the party.” Id. (quoting Smith v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
124 F.R.D. 103, 107 (D. Md. 1989)). The Court held that sanctions, including the most
severe sanction of dismissal, must be available to trial courts not only to penalize, but also
to deter those who might otherwise be tempted to commit similar discovery violations. Id.
The Court held that “the trial court should dismiss a cause of action for failure to comply
with discovery only under the most extreme circumstances.” Id. at 1388. The following
considerations apply in deciding whether a trial court abused its discretion by dismissing an
action with prejudice:
First, dismissal is authorized only when the failure to comply with [discovery
obligations] results from wilfulness or bad faith, and not from the inability to
comply. Dismissal is proper only in situation[s] where the deterrent value of
Rule 37 cannot be substantially achieved by the use of less drastic sanctions.
Another consideration is whether the other party’s preparation for trial was
substantially prejudiced. Finally, dismissal may be inappropriate when neglect
is plainly attributable to an attorney rather than a blameless client, or when a
party’s simple negligence is grounded in confusion or sincere
misunderstanding of the court’s orders.
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Id. at 1389 (quoting Batson v. Neal Spelce Assocs., Inc ., 765 F.2d 511, 514 (5th Cir. 1985)).
“Willfulness” may be “either a willful, intentional, and bad faith attempt to conceal evidence
or a gross indifference to discovery obligations.” Id. at 1390 (citation omitted).
¶17. Applying these criteria, the Court found that Pierce’s failure to respond truthfully was
wilful and in bad faith because she admitted the truth only when confronted by the
defendants. Id. at 1390. The Court recognized that the trial court had considered imposing
the lesser sanction of allowing Pierce to be cross examined at trial about the false discovery
responses. Id. The trial court had rejected that option because cross examination is available
when a party makes an inconsistent statement. Id. The trial court also had declined to impose
the lesser sanction of assessing Pierce with fees and costs because the fees probably would
exceed any damages awarded if the case were retried. Id. at 1390-91. The Court found that
the trial court’s decision that lesser sanctions would not suffice was justified because “any
other sanction beside[s] dismissal would virtually allow the plaintiff to get away with lying
under oath without a meaningful penalty” and would have insufficient deterrent effect. Id.
at 1391. The Court found that, although the defendants had suffered no prejudice, no
requirement exists that the defendants suffer substantial prejudice from the absence of
evidence. Id. Further, the Court found that the discovery violation was attributable to Pierce,
not to her attorney. Id. The Court found that, because substantial evidence in the record
established Pierce’s deception, the trial court had not abused its discretion by dismissing her
case with prejudice. Id.
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¶18. This test from Pierce has been applied in numerous cases involving sanctions for
discovery violations. In Scoggins v. Ellzey Beverages, Inc., 743 So. 2d 990 (Miss. 1999),
this Court applied the test in affirming a dismissal for discovery violations similar to those
at issue in this case. Scoggins filed a complaint alleging that she was in a grocery store when
an employee struck her with a loaded dolly, injuring her foot, leg, and back. Id. at 991. In
interrogatories, Scoggins was asked about prior injuries to the areas she claimed had been
hurt in the accident. Id. She responded by saying that she never had injured any of the same
areas but that she had a pinched nerve in her back in 1958 and had completely recovered. Id.
She also denied having been prescribed Xanax before the accident. Id. at 992. Later, in her
deposition, the defendants repeatedly questioned Scoggins about whether she had sustained
prior foot, leg, or back injuries. Id. at 991. Other than the pinched nerve, Scoggins
maintained she had no problems with those areas before the accident. Id. But medical records
from Scoggins’s personal physician showed that she had been examined for pain, numbness,
and arthritis in her left leg, back, hip, and spine in thirty-five visits from 1976 through
January 1994, two months before the March 1994 accident. Id. at 992. Scoggins also had
undergone a lumbar omnipaque myelogram in 1991 for lower back and leg pain. Id.
Additionally, she had been treated with Xanax from June 1993 through January 1994. Id.
¶19. The defendants moved to dismiss based on Scoggins’s perjured testimony in her
discovery responses. Id. In response, Scoggins claimed that she had failed to remember her
complete medical history. Id. On appeal, Scoggins argued that the trial court had abused its
discretion by not imposing a lesser sanction. Id. at 995. But this Court found that the trial
13
court had not abused its discretion by dismissing the case. Id. at 997. The Court found that,
because the trial court is the judge of witness credibility, and because of the evidence of
Scoggins’s deception, determining that Scoggins had misrepresented the truth wilfully and
in bad faith was within the trial court’s discretion. Id. at 995. And the Court found that the
trial court had considered lesser sanctions by describing the possible effects of less drastic
sanctions and finding that no other sanction was appropriate. Id. at 997. The Court noted the
trial court’s finding that the defendants had been prejudiced substantially by Scoggins’s
actions. Id. And no evidence existed that Scoggins’s attorney had been at fault. Id. Further,
because Scoggins had obscured only the relevant portions of her medical history, no evidence
lent any credibility to her claim of confusion and memory loss. Id. The Court found that,
although “[d]ismissal with prejudice is a sanction that should be imposed only in those rare
instances where the conduct of a party is so egregious that no other sanction will meet the
demands of justice,” the trial court was within its discretion in finding that Scoggins’s wilful
submission of false answers to interrogatories and false testimony in her deposition
warranted dismissal. Id.
¶20. In other similar cases, this Court likewise has found that deceptive conduct in
discovery warranted the extreme sanction of dismissal under the test from Pierce. In Allen
v. National Railroad Passenger Corp., 934 So. 2d 1006 (Miss. 2006), the plaintiff, who had
instituted a lawsuit to recover for a back injury, was found to have lied in sworn discovery
responses about having suffered a prior back injury and having filed a workers’
compensation claim. Id. at 1008. His medical records revealed that he had suffered prior
14
injuries to his lower back in the same location he claimed had been injured in the accident.
Id. Allen said he had forgotten the prior injury and treatment. Id. at 1009. The Court found
that Allen’s misconduct was not a single untruthful response, but repeated failures to disclose
the prior injury, and that the trial court had not abused its discretion by dismissing the action
after weighing the factors from Pierce. Id. at 1012.
¶21. In Ashmore v. Mississippi Authority on Educational Television, David Ashmore
claimed injuries to his right and left knees, back, neck, and upper arms, and his wife asserted
a loss of consortium claim. Ashmore, 148 So. 3d at 979. The plaintiffs’ interrogatory
responses omitted David Ashmore’s prior back injury, prior injuries to his right and left
knees, and a subsequent injury to his left leg. Id. And the wife had failed to disclose that she
was seeking similar damages in an unrelated case. Id. at 980. This Court found no abuse of
discretion in the trial court’s dismissal of the action; the trial court had found a pattern of
wilful misrepresentations that subverted the judicial process. The court rejected lesser
sanctions, found that the defendants had incurred “major inconvenience in time, attorney
fees, and general frustration,” and found that the Ashmores, not their counsel, were
responsible for the false discovery responses. Id. at 984-85.
¶22. Edwards cites Kinzie v. Belk Department Stores, L.P., in which the Court held that
the trial court had abused its discretion by dismissing an action based on discovery violations.
Kinzie, 164 So. 3d at 979-80. Kinzie sued his employer after he injured his back while
unloading a truck. Id. at 975. Kinzie gave a sworn interrogatory answer stating that, since the
accident, he had been
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[un]able to cut grass or take care of the lawn, unable to perform house
cleaning, [un]able to drive but for very short periods of time, unable to stand
or walk for long period[s] of time, [unable to] lift or carry objects or even
groceries, difficulty engaging in usual sexual activities, unable to play and hold
grandchildren, and other activities as before the incident.
Id. at 976. Belk hired a private investigator who performed surveillance of Kinzie and
provided video footage showing Kinzie driving, walking to the post office and to his
attorney’s office, and working with another man on a shed in his backyard. Id. In his
response, Kinzie asserted that none of those activities had violated his doctor’s restrictions
and that he had performed no task that he had said in discovery responses he could not
perform. Id. The trial court found that he had made false assertions in discovery responses
and dismissed his action with prejudice. Id. at 977.
¶23. This Court granted certiorari to clarify that Kinzie’s discovery violation warranted
lesser sanctions than dismissal. Id. at 977. The Court emphasized that dismissal is reserved
only for those cases presenting the most extreme circumstances. Id. (citing Pierce, 688 So.
2d at 1388). Unlike in Pierce, in which the plaintiff had “flat-out lied under oath” about the
presence of a witness to the accident, the Court found that Kinzie’s discovery response was
open to multiple interpretations. Id. The Court held that, “where the discovery violation at
issue is less extreme and open to potential truthful interpretations, this Court will not hesitate
to reverse a trial court’s Rule 37 dismissal.” Id. at 978.
¶24. The Court reviewed Wood ex rel. Wood v. Biloxi Public School District, 757 So. 2d
190 (Miss. 2000), in which the plaintiff had reported the following in his interrogatory
answer: “I no longer am able to enjoy tinkering with automobiles as the stooping, bending,
16
and squatting are painful.” Id. at 193. The defendants provided surveillance footage of the
plaintiff engaging in those activities. Id. The Court found that dismissal was not warranted
because the single, ambiguously worded discovery response indicated the plaintiff still could
perform the listed tasks, just with less enjoyment than before. Id. at 194. Thus the defendants
had not established that the plaintiff had made false statements in discovery, and no pattern
of false responses had existed. Id.
¶25. Kinzie found the discovery violation at issue to be akin to the one in Wood, rather than
to the ones in Pierce, Scoggins, or Ashmore. Kinzie said that
Kinzie did not blatantly lie about the existence of a witness, as did the plaintiff
in Pierce, nor did he completely misrepresent years of medical history and
procedures, as did the plaintiff in Scoggins, nor did he hide any other
surgeries, as did the plaintiff in Ashmore. The Court finds no “total lack of
congruence” between Kinzie’s responses and his medical records, as the trial
court found in Scoggins. Nor do we find this to be “the paradigm situation in
which the plaintiff knowingly refused to be forthcoming and actively withheld
the truth from the court and gave a great deal of perjured testimony” as this
Court found in Pierce.
Kinzie, 164 So. 3d at 979 (citations omitted). Kinzie also found that, although the trial court
had found that Kinzie’s response was false, “the perceived falsehood arose in an isolated
incident, and it certainly has not been established that Kinzie’s statements in discovery
indicate any kind of pattern of misleading or false responses.” Id. Because the discovery
violation was not extreme, the trial court should have imposed a lesser sanction. Id.
¶26. After Kinzie, this Court decided May v. Austin, 240 So. 3d 389 (Miss. 2018). In his
lawsuit, May claimed that a car accident had caused injuries to his neck, lower back, and
right shoulder. Id. at 390. In interrogatory responses, he consistently denied any prior injuries
17
or medical treatment to his neck, lower back, and right shoulder. Id. at 391. But the
defendants obtained medical records by subpoena showing that he had sustained prior
significant injuries to his neck and back and had been treated for his right shoulder just four
months before the accident. Id. The defendants filed a motion to dismiss that initially was
denied by the trial court on the ground that May had signed a medical authorization, which
was “slightly indicative of a lack of motive to engage in a pattern of deception.” Id. But on
reconsideration, the trial court granted the motion to dismiss on the basis of May’s
unequivocal denials of any prior injuries to the same areas and because, as it turned out, May
had not executed a medical authorization, which negated the trial court’s initial reason for
denying the motion to dismiss. Id. at 393. Applying the test from Pierce and the precedent
discussed above, this Court found that the trial court had not abused its discretion by
dismissing the action based on May’s false responses in discovery. Id. at 398-99.
¶27. Citing Kinzie, Edwards argues that, because her only fault was failing to recall minor
medical treatment from nearly a decade before her discovery responses, the trial court erred
by imposing any sanction or, at the most, it should have imposed a lesser sanction than
dismissal. She also argues that, because she did execute a medical authorization, her case is
distinguishable from May. Edwards also cites two cases from the Court of Appeals, Westfall
v. Goggins, 247 So. 3d 244 (Miss. Ct. App. 2017), and Bowdry v. T. Mart, 240 So. 3d 489
(Miss. Ct. App. 2018), in which the Court of Appeals reversed dismissals based on discovery
violations consisting of inconsistencies between medical records and discovery responses.
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¶28. Our review is limited to whether the dismissal amounted to clear error, not whether
we would have dismissed the original action. Kinzie, 164 So. 3d at 977. Although this is a
close case, a faithful application of our standard of review yields the conclusion that the trial
court did not abuse its discretion by imposing the ultimate sanction of dismissal with
prejudice. As an initial matter, the trial court was within its discretion in finding that
Edwards’s false discovery responses were the products of wilfulness and bad faith rather than
an inability to comply. While Edwards claimed that she had been unable to recall her medical
history, the medical records unearthed by Coca-Cola and Lee reveal an established history
of middle and lower back problems. She presented to medical providers on several occasions
with complaints of back pain. Most notably, at her visit to Northcrest Medical Center on
September 26, 2007, Edwards reported that her back had been injured when another
physician had pushed on her spine. During that visit, she reported that she had three bulging
discs in her back for which she was being treated by a neurologist in another state. The next
month, she was diagnosed with degenerative disc disease. The month after that, she visited
Northcrest again, reporting that she had injured her back in a fall. Multiple medical records
note a history of back pain, including pain in her middle and lower back pain. Those records
directly contradicted Edwards’s numerous assertions in her sworn interrogatory responses
and deposition testimony that she had no prior middle or lower back problems and that she
never had seen a medical provider for such problems.
¶29. Edwards contends that she should not have been expected to remember medical
conditions and treatment from almost ten years before her deposition testimony. But this
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contention is belied by her submission of a supplemental interrogatory answer reporting that,
the year before the medical records at issue, she had seen a chiropractor for her hip. Further,
unlike in Kinzie, Edwards submitted a pattern of answers that directly contradicted her
medical records concerning her prior injury. This case was not dismissed because of “one
ambiguously worded response to one interrogatory question.” Kinzie, 164 So. 3d at 978
(citing Wood, 757 So. 2d at 194). Rather, Edwards “completely misrepresent[ed] years of
medical history and procedures.” Kinzie, 164 So. 3d at 979. The trial court found that she
“very succinctly and definitively lied under oath” about never having had any prior treatment
for her middle or lower back. It was within the trial court’s discretion to find that Edwards’s
explanation for the discrepancy between her sworn answers and her medical records was
incredible and that this was, indeed, “the paradigm situation in which the plaintiff knowingly
refused to be forthcoming and actively withheld the truth from the court and gave a great deal
of perjured testimony.” Id.
¶30. Edwards’s execution of a medical authorization to permit the defendants access to her
medical records avails her nothing. The evidence of the medical authorization was before the
trial court. But that court in reaching its carefully considered and well-articulated conclusion
did not weigh it in favor of Edwards. Despite the medical authorization, as the trial court
reasoned, the defendants had not discovered all pertinent medical records concerning
Edwards’s prior back treatment. Although this Court in May recognized that the trial court
in that case had found that the plaintiff’s execution of a medical authorization indicated an
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absence of a motive to engage in deception, this Court has not held that a trial court is
required so to find in every case involving false discovery responses.
¶31. Second, the trial court did consider, but decided against, the imposition of lesser
sanctions for Edwards’s wilful misrepresentations, finding that a lesser sanction would not
accomplish the deterrent value of dismissal because any lesser sanction would permit
Edwards to get away with having lied under oath. Edwards argues that this Court should
follow the Court of Appeals’s decisions in Westfall and Bowdry and find dismissal too
severe a penalty. But in Westfall, the Court of Appeals found that the plaintiff’s denial of a
previous similar injury had been mitigated by confusion between injuries to her right and left
shoulders, her identification of her treating physician in her interrogatory answers, and her
execution of a medical authorization. Westfall, 247 So. 3d at 252. And in Bowdry, although
in his deposition the plaintiff had denied prior treatment for his neck and lower back, his
interrogatory responses led to the disclosure of the contradictory medical records, a fact
which the Court of Appeals found to have been mitigating. Bowdry, 240 So. 3d at 496. Both
Westfall and Bowdry, while worthy of our consideration, were decided by the Court of
Appeals and are not binding on this Court. Further, in May, this Court again affirmed a
dismissal based on misconduct similar to that in this case. May, 240 So. 3d at 398-99. The
facts of the present case are substantially similar to those in Scoggins, in which this Court
affirmed the trial court’s finding that lesser sanctions than dismissal were inadequate. We
hold that, under the particular circumstances of this case, the trial court was within its
discretion in finding that no sanction less than dismissal would serve the interests of justice.
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¶32. The trial court also considered whether Coca-Cola’s and Lee’s preparation for trial
had been prejudiced substantially by Edwards’s misrepresentations. Although this Court has
held that no finding of substantial prejudice is required for dismissal, here, the trial court
found that the defendants’ trial preparation had been prejudiced substantially. The trial court
found that, due to Edwards’s deception, the defendants would need to retake her deposition,
possibly take others’ depositions, and undertake an exhaustive, multistate search for
additional medical records. This would result in the defendants’ expenditure of more time
and resources than is customary to find this information. We find that the trial court was
within its discretion in finding that the defendants’ trial preparation had been prejudiced
substantially, and that court’s finding on this factor supports its ultimate conclusion that the
case should be dismissed in the interests of justice.
¶33. Finally, the trial court found “most troublesome” that the neglect was attributable to
Edwards, not to her counsel. The trial court rejected Edwards’s attempt to blame her former
counsel for not bringing the medical records to her attention, finding that Edwards’s conduct
was attributable solely to her dishonesty. The trial court observed that Edwards had numerous
opportunities to correct any confusion or misunderstanding but that she had declined to do
so.
¶34. The trial court thoroughly and “properly analyzed [Edwards’s] discovery violations,
applied appropriate weight to each misrepresentation, and arrived at a justifiable conclusion.”
May, 240 So. 3d at 398. Edwards’s submission of numerous sworn discovery responses that
directly contradicted her medical records concerning prior medical treatment of her back, the
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same area she alleged had been injured in the accident, was akin to the misconduct that
warranted dismissal in Scoggins. Although in Scoggins the prior treatment was less remote
in time than in this case, the trial court’s decision was among the reasonable decisions that
could have been made based on the evidence. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its
discretion by dismissing Edwards’s case. Because we affirm the dismissal of Edwards’s suit
based on her discovery violation, the issue of summary judgment is moot and will not be
addressed.
CONCLUSION
¶35. We find that the trial court properly considered the factors from Pierce v. Heritage
Properties and that it acted within its discretion in dismissing this case with prejudice.
¶36. AFFIRMED.
RANDOLPH, C.J., KING, P.J., COLEMAN, MAXWELL, BEAM,
CHAMBERLIN, ISHEE AND GRIFFIS, JJ., CONCUR.
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