Jordan Ex Rel. Jordan v. Deery





ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:               ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:


BESSIE M. TAYLOR                  MARK A. LIENHOOP

Taylor and Green                        Newby, Lewis, Kaminski & Jones
Gary, Indiana                                LaPorte, Indiana


DOUGLAS GRIMES                    EDWARD A. CHAPLEAU

Gary, Indiana                                Chapleau & Kuehl
                                        South Bend, Indiana

                                        DAVID SPALDING
                                        ROBERT PALMER

                                        JANE BENNETT

                                        May, Oberfell & Lorber
                                        South Bend, Indiana

                                        KARL MULVANEY

                                        NANA QUAY-SMITH

                                        Bingham Summers Welsh & Spilman LLP
                                        Indianapolis, Indiana





                                   IN THE


                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA



SHELAMIAH D. JORDAN bnf GENEVA          )
JORDAN AND LYNN JORDAN,                 )
                                        )    Supreme Court Cause Number
      Appellants (Plaintiffs),               )     75S05-0106-CV-310
                                        )
            v.                          )
                                        )
MICHAEL DEERY, M.D., WARREN       )     Court of Appeals Cause Number
REISS, M.D., LAKE SHORE CLINIC,         )    75A05-9807-CV-342
KEIM HOUSER, M.D., HOLY CROSS           )
HOSPITAL,                               )
                                        )
      Appellees (Plaintiffs).                      )

                    APPEAL FROM THE STARKE CIRCUIT COURT
                      The Honorable David Matsey, Judge
                        Cause No.  75C01-9009-CP-258





                               CIVIL TRANSFER



                              November 22, 2002

RUCKER, Justice


      This  medical  malpractice  action  involving  a  disabled  child  has
generated three appellate court opinions, an emergency stay and  hearing  in
the Court of Appeals, and  an  original  action  in  this  Court.   In  this
ongoing litigation we hold today that Article I, Section 20 of  the  Indiana
Constitution, which provides that “[i]n all civil cases, the right of  trial
by jury shall remain inviolate,” Ind. Const. art.  I,  §  20,  includes  the
ancillary right to be present in the courtroom  during  both  the  liability
and damage phase of trial.

                      I.  Facts and Procedural History


      Geneva Jordan (“Mother”) was a  prenatal  patient  of  Michael  Deery,
M.D., and Warren Reiss, M.D., both of  whom  practiced  family  medicine  at
Lakeshore Clinic in Culver, Indiana.  On December 8, 1986, one  week  before
her due date, Mother began experiencing uterine contractions.  In the  early
morning hours of December 9, 1986,  she  went  to  Holy  Cross  Hospital  in
Plymouth, Indiana, where she  was  examined  by  emergency  room  staff  and
advised to go home.  Mother returned to the hospital at 7:00 a.m. that  same
day and was again examined and advised to go home.  This time, however,  she
decided to wait at the hospital and was examined twice more  throughout  the
course of the day.  Finally, at 6:10 p.m.,  Mother  was  admitted  into  the
hospital as a patient in active labor.  Approximately twenty  minutes  after
attaching electronic  fetal  monitors,  the  nurses  noted  signs  of  fetal
distress.   Dr.  Reiss  then  transferred  Mother  to  South  Bend  Memorial
Hospital in case a Caesarian delivery was  necessary.   Keim  Houser,  M.D.,
the obstetrician on  call  at  South  Bend  Memorial,  examined  Mother  and
determined that a Caesarian delivery was unnecessary.  Following a  delivery
complicated by shoulder dystocia[1] and the umbilical  cord  wrapped  around
the infant’s neck.[2]  Shelamiah Jordan was born at 2:17  a.m.  on  December
10, 1986.  Shortly  thereafter,  she  was  diagnosed  with  fetal  distress,
asphyxia, cerebral palsy, and Erb’s palsy of the left arm.
      On December 3, 1988, Geneva Jordan and Lynn  Jordan,  the  parents  of
Shelamiah, filed a proposed medical malpractice complaint with  the  Indiana
Department of Insurance.  The Jordans alleged that  the  negligence  of  Dr.
Deery, Dr. Reiss, Lake Shore Clinic, Holy Cross  Hospital,  and  Dr.  Houser
(referred to collectively as “Healthcare Providers”) occurring during  labor
and delivery resulted in personal injuries to  both  Mother  and  Shelamiah.
On May 4, 1990, the Medical Review  Panel  issued  a  unanimous  opinion  in
favor of Healthcare Providers.
      Thereafter, on  their  own  behalf  and  acting  as  Shelamiah’s  next
friends, the Jordans filed a complaint for medical malpractice in the  trial
court.  In response, Healthcare Providers moved for summary judgment,  which
the trial court granted.  Shelamiah and the Jordans appealed, and the  Court
of Appeals affirmed the trial court.  Jordan v. Deery, 590 N.E.2d 669  (Ind.
Ct. App. 1993).   On  transfer,  this  Court  concluded  that  although  the
summary judgment motion was properly granted on the Jordans’ claims  because
of the  statute  of  limitations,  the  motion  was  improperly  granted  on
Shelamiah’s claims.  Jordan v. Deery, 609 N.E.2d  1104,  1108  (Ind.  1993).
We remanded the cause for trial.
      Prior to trial, Healthcare Providers filed a motion to  bifurcate  the
liability  and  damages  phases.   The  trial  court  granted  the   motion.
Healthcare  Providers  then  filed  a  motion  in  limine  requesting   that
Shelamiah be excluded from the  courtroom  during  the  liability  phase  of
trial.  According to Healthcare Providers, Shelamiah was unable  to  consult
with counsel, and her presence would prejudice the jury.[3]
      In support  of  their  motion,  Healthcare  Providers  cited  Gage  v.
Bozarth, 505 N.E.2d 64 (Ind. Ct. App. 1987), trans. denied.   In  that  case
the trial court excluded the seven-year-old  plaintiff  from  the  courtroom
during the liability phase of trial.  The record showed that the  child  was
a quadriplegic who was able to breathe only with the help of  a  ventilator.
Id. at 65.  Citing Helminski v. Ayerst Laboratories, 766 F.2d 208, 218  (6th
Cir. 1985), the Court of Appeals adopted a two-pronged test  which  must  be
satisfied before a trial court may exclude a plaintiff  from  the  courtroom
during the liability phase of trial:  (1) the party  seeking  the  exclusion
must show that  the  plaintiff’s  presence  has  a  potentially  prejudicial
effect on the jury; and (2) the  trial  court  must  determine  whether  the
plaintiff  can  understand  the  proceedings  and  assist  counsel  in   any
meaningful way.  Gage, 505 N.E.2d at 67.  However, if the trial court  finds
that the plaintiff can understand the proceedings and assist counsel in  any
meaningful way, then the plaintiff cannot  be  excluded  regardless  of  the
prejudicial impact.  Id.
      In response to Healthcare Providers’ motion, Shelamiah  argued  before
the trial court that Gage did not survive enactment of  the  Americans  with
Disabilities Act of 1990 (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101  et  seq.   The  ADA  is
intended “to provide a clear and  comprehensive  national  mandate  for  the
elimination of discrimination against individuals with  disabilities.”   Id.
§ 12101(b)(1).  Title II of the ADA, which is the  public  services  portion
of the Act, provides in pertinent part:  “no  qualified  individual  with  a
disability  shall,  by  reason  of  such  disability,   be   excluded   from
participation in or be denied the benefits of  the  services,  programs,  or
activities of a public entity, or be  subjected  to  discrimination  by  any
such entity.”  Id. § 12132.  A “qualified individual with a  disability”  is
“an  individual  with  a  disability  who,  with   or   without   reasonable
modifications . . . meets the essential  eligibility  requirements  for  the
receipt of services or the participation in programs or activities  provided
by a public entity.”  Id. § 12131(2).
      The trial court determined that Gage was  still  good  law  and  after
conducting a hearing found that the two-part test set  forth  in  that  case
had  been  satisfied.   Accordingly,  the  trial  court  granted  Healthcare
Providers’ motion in limine.  Shelamiah  then  moved  the  trial  court  for
certification of its order and  a  stay  pending  appeal.   The  motion  was
denied.  On July 7, 1998,  the  first  day  of  trial,  Shelamiah  filed  an
emergency petition with  the  Court  of  Appeals.   The  court  granted  the
motion, entered an order staying the trial court proceedings, and  scheduled
the matter for oral argument on July 10,  1998.   Following  oral  argument,
the Court of Appeals dissolved the stay and remanded the  cause  for  trial.
Before trial resumed on July 13, 1998, Shelamiah filed  an  original  action
with this Court, which we dismissed the same day.  State ex rel.  Jordan  v.
Starke Cir. Ct., No. 75S00-9807-OR-391 (Ind. July 13, 1998).
      The liability phase of trial concluded on July 21, 1998, and the  jury
returned a verdict in favor of Healthcare Providers.  On  appeal,  Shelamiah
renewed her argument that the Gage test did not  survive  enactment  of  the
ADA.  In an unpublished memorandum decision, the Court of  Appeals  affirmed
the trial court.  Jordan v. Deery,  No.  75A05-9807-CV-342  (Ind.  Ct.  App.
Dec. 29, 2000).  In so doing the Court noted, “The ADA prohibits the  forced
exclusion from  activities  of  those  who  could  partake  with  reasonable
modifications, but promulgates neither a per se rule of inclusion nor a  per
se rule of exclusion.”  Slip op. at 8.  The Court of Appeals also  concluded
that the Gage test survived the enactment of the ADA and that the  test  was
satisfied in this case.  Having previously granted transfer, we now  reverse
the judgment of the trial court.

                               II.  Discussion



      We first observe that a number of jurisdictions still employ the  two-
pronged Helminski test, which the Court of Appeals adopted in Gage, even  in
the face of the ADA.  See, e.g., Preferred  Props.,  Inc.  v.  Indian  River
Estates, Inc., 276 F.3d 790, 797 (6th Cir. 2002), cert. denied, 122  S.  Ct.
2663 (2002); Rubert-Torres v. Hosp. San Pablo, Inc., 205 F.3d 472, 478  (1st
Cir. 2000); Green v. North Arundel Hosp., 730 A.2d 221, 234 (Md. App.  1999)
(listing courts that have adopted Helminski).   Further,  although  the  ADA
has been in effect for more than  a  decade,  our  research  shows  that  no
court, state or federal, has decided whether the Helminski  test  is  viable
in light of the ADA.  See, e.g., Thompson v. Colorado, 278 F.3d  1020,  1032
(10th Cir. 2001), cert. denied, 122 S. Ct.  1960  (2002)  (recognizing  that
Helminski protects a category of rights required to be given some degree  of
accommodation under the Fourteenth  Amendment’s  due  process  clause  while
also recognizing that the due process clause does not  contain  the  general
mandate of Title II of the ADA); Green,  730  A.2d  at  233  n.14  (assuming
without deciding that the Helminski  test  survived  the  enactment  of  the
ADA); Matthew A.  Sokol,  Cary  v.  Oneok,  Inc.:   Oklahoma  Supreme  Court
Upholds Plaintiff’s Right to Attend Trial, 19 Pace L. Rev. 195,  214  (1998)
(“The issue of whether the [ADA] gives rise to a cognizable cause of  action
for a plaintiff who is excluded from trial is yet to  be  litigated.”).   In
fact, the weight of authority suggests that the Helminski test has  survived
enactment of the ADA.   Nonetheless,  after  considerable  deliberation,  we
agree with Shelamiah that Gage is no longer good law, but  for  an  entirely
different  reason,  namely:   Article  I,  Section   20   of   the   Indiana
Constitution.


                  A.  Rules of Constitutional Construction

      Generally, questions arising under the Indiana Constitution are to  be
resolved by examining the intent of the framers, the language  of  the  text
in the context of the history surrounding  its  drafting  and  ratification,
and case law interpreting the specific provisions.  McIntosh v. Melroe,  729
N.E.2d 972, 974 (Ind. 2000).  However, these “constitutional  talismans”  or
guideposts are not always instructive.  Id.  Under  such  circumstances,  it
becomes appropriate to look elsewhere, including case law from other  states
interpreting similar provisions  in  their  constitutions.   Id.;  see  also
Ajabu v. State, 693 N.E.2d 921, 934 (Ind. 1998).

            B.  Historical Development of Right to Trial by Jury


      When the right to trial by jury was incorporated  into  the  1816  and
1851 Indiana Constitutions, it was hardly a novel  concept.   Some  scholars
trace this right as far back as ancient Greece and  the  Athenian  statesman
Solon.  Richard S. Arnold, Trial by Jury:  The  Constitutional  Right  to  a
Jury of Twelve in Civil Trials, 22 Hofstra  L.  Rev.  1,  6  (1993).   Other
scholars trace this right only to the Middle Ages and the reign  of  William
the Conqueror.  Id.  Regardless of its origins, at  least  by  the  eleventh
century, the right to trial by jury was firmly established in England.   The
Magna Carta, signed by King John on June 15, 1215 at  Runnymede,  guaranteed
the right to a jury trial.  And during  the  next  one  hundred  years,  the
English kings reaffirmed the Magna Carta thirty-eight times.  By the  1600s,
when the thirteen colonies were founded, the right to  trial  by  jury  “had
become one of the great palladiums of English liberty.”   Id.  at  13.   The
English regarded this right “‘as a bulwark of liberty, and  as  a  means  of
preventing oppression by the Crown.’”  Stephan Landsman, The Civil  Jury  in
America:  Scenes from An Unappreciated History, 44 Hastings  L.J.  579,  591
(1993) (quoting Austin W. Scott, Trial by  Jury  and  the  Reform  of  Civil
Procedure, 31 Harv. L. Rev. 669, 676 (1918)).
      The colonists brought the right  to  trial  by  jury  with  them  from
England.  The 1606  charter  given  by  James  I  to  the  Virginia  Company
incorporated the right to a jury trial, and by 1624 all trials in  Virginia,
both civil and criminal, were by  jury.   In  1628,  the  Massachusetts  Bay
Colony introduced jury trials, and the right  to  a  jury  trial  was  later
codified in the Massachusetts Body of Liberties  in  1641.   The  Colony  of
West New Jersey implemented trial by jury in 1677, as did New  Hampshire  in
1680  and  Pennsylvania,  under  William  Penn’s  proprietorship,  in  1682.
Arnold, supra, at 13; Landsman, supra, at  592.   Eventually,  all  colonies
embraced trial by jury.
      Nevertheless, through various measures, the King of England  tried  to
dilute the  right  to  a  jury  trial.   Beginning  in  the  mid-1770s,  the
colonists held a series of  congresses  to  address  the  King’s  oppressive
behavior.[4]  The work of the congresses culminated in  the  Declaration  of
Independence  signed  on  July  4,  1776.   Indeed,   The   Declaration   of
Independence lists the denial of “‘the benefits of trial by  jury’”  as  one
of the grievances that led to the creation of a new nation.  Arnold,  supra,
at  14;  Landsman,  supra,  at  596  (both  quoting   The   Declaration   of
Independence para. 19 (U.S. 1776)).
      Considering the actions the colonists took to safeguard  and  preserve
the right to  trial  by  jury,  it  is  no  surprise  that  this  right  was
exceedingly popular with the drafters of  the  first  constitutions  of  the
newly independent states.  Virginia set precedent in  1776  by  specifically
including the right to both civil and criminal jury trials in  its  bill  of
rights. The majority of other states quickly  followed  suit.[5]   Landsman,
supra, at 596.

          C.  History Surrounding Adoption of Article I, Section 20


      The first constitutional  reference  to  jury  trials  in  this  State
appeared in Article I, Section 5 of the 1816 Constitution, which provided:
      That in all civil cases, where the value in controversy  shall  exceed
      the sum of twenty dollars, and in all criminal cases, except in  petit
      misdemeanors which shall be punished by fine only, not exceeding three
      dollars, in such manner as the legislature may prescribe by  law,  the
      right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.


Ind. Const. of 1816, art. I, § 5.  When delegates met  again  in  late  1850
and early 1851 to draft a  new  constitution,  a  committee  on  rights  and
privileges was  formed.   This  committee  was  charged  with,  among  other
things, deciding whether to extend the right of trial by jury as it  existed
in the 1816 Constitution.  1 Report of the Debates and  Proceedings  of  the
Convention for the Revision of the Constitution of the State of Indiana  226
(A.H. Brown ed., 1850).  The committee focused primarily  on  whether  there
should be a minimum amount in controversy before the right to trial by  jury
was implicated and whether the civil and criminal right  to  trial  by  jury
should be contained within the same section.  Id. at 352-53; Journal of  the
Convention of the People of the State of Indiana to Amend  the  Constitution
80, 90, 204 (Austin H. Brown ed., 1851) (reprint 1936).   In  the  end,  the
following version prevailed:  “In all civil cases, the  right  of  trial  by
jury shall remain inviolate.”[6]  Ind. Const. art. I, § 20.
               D.  Case Law Interpreting Article I, Section 20
      Despite the lack of debate concerning  the  enactment  of  Article  I,
Section 20, appellate courts of this State have examined this  provision  on
numerous occasions.  With very few exceptions, the courts have addressed  it
in the context of the meaning of  “shall  remain  inviolate.”   Since  1877,
when the Indiana Supreme Court declared that “shall remain inviolate”  means
“continue as it was” at common law, Allen v.  Anderson,  57  Ind.  388,  389
(1877), the courts have explained  that  the  right  to  trial  by  jury  is
preserved only in those cases that were  triable  by  jury  at  common  law.
See, e.g., State ex rel. Van Orden v. Floyd Cir.  Ct.,  274  Ind.  597,  412
N.E.2d 1216, 1218 (1980); Hayworth v. Bromwell, 239  Ind.  430,  158  N.E.2d
285, 287 (1959); Coca Cola Bottling Works v. Harvey, 209 Ind. 262, 198  N.E.
782, 782 (1935); Reynolds v. State, 698  N.E.2d  390,  394  (Ind.  Ct.  App.
1998), trans. denied.  Otherwise, this provision has not  been  the  subject
of much litigation.

                    E.  Case Law from Other Jurisdictions


      The  question  of  whether  a  plaintiff  can  be  excluded  from  the
courtroom during the liability phase of trial has been litigated in  several
jurisdictions across the country.  Some of the jurisdictions answering  this
question  in  the  negative  have  relied  on  provisions  in  their   state
constitutions guaranteeing a right  to  trial  by  jury.   For  example,  in
Carlisle v. Nassau County, 408 N.Y.S.2d  114  (N.Y.  App.  Div.  1978),  the
trial court excluded from the courtroom during jury selection  a  paraplegic
plaintiff who was confined to a wheelchair.  According to the  trial  court,
the  plaintiff’s  presence  would  prejudice  the  jury.   On  appeal,   the
plaintiff challenged his exclusion.  In its analysis, the  court  looked  to
the historical development of the right to trial  by  jury  and  Article  I,
Section 2 of the New York Constitution, which provides:  “Trial by  jury  in
all cases in which it  has  heretofore  been  guaranteed  by  constitutional
provision shall remain inviolate forever . . . .”  Id. at 116 (quoting  N.Y.
Const.  art.  I,  §  2).   The  court  concluded   that   “the   fundamental
constitutional right of a person to have  a  jury  trial  in  certain  civil
cases includes therein the ancillary right to be present at  all  stages  of
such a  trial.”   Id.   The  court  went  on  to  observe  that  a  judicial
determination that the physical appearance of a party “may be the basis  for
precluding such party from any stage of a trial[] is fraught with danger  in
its implications.”  Id. at 118.  The court concluded that the plaintiff  was
entitled to a new trial.
      In Florida Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Jones, 60 So. 2d 396 (Fla.  1952),
the plaintiff was injured in  an  automobile  collision  and  at  trial  was
brought into the courtroom on  a  stretcher,  accompanied  by  a  nurse  and
hospital attendant. The defendant objected,  arguing  that  the  plaintiff’s
presence would prejudice the jury.  The trial court overruled the  objection
and ultimately the jury returned a verdict for  the  plaintiff.   Responding
to the defendant’s claim on appeal  that  the  plaintiff  should  have  been
excluded  from  the  courtroom  during  trial,  the  Florida  Supreme  Court
concluded:
      One who institutes an action is entitled to  be  present  when  it  is
      tried.  That, we think, is a right that should not be tempered by  the
      physical condition of the litigant.  It would be strange,  indeed,  to
      promulgate a rule that a plaintiff’s right to appear at his own  trial
      would depend on his personal  attractiveness,  or  that  he  could  be
      excluded from the court room if  he  happened  to  be  unsightly  from
      injuries which he  was  trying  to  prove  the  defendant  negligently
      caused.


Id. at 397.  The court ultimately determined that the  plaintiff’s  presence
at trial was proper, absent any proof of “deceit” or “subterfuge.”   Finding
neither, the judgment of the trial court was affirmed.
      Though factually different from  the  case  at  bar,  in  Rozbicki  v.
Huybrechts, 589  A.2d  363  (Conn.  1991),  the  Connecticut  Supreme  Court
examined the nature of a party’s  right  to  be  present  in  the  courtroom
during the jury selection phase of trial.   Like  the  Carlisle  court,  the
Connecticut  Supreme  Court  looked  to  Article  I,  Section  19   of   its
constitution, which provides:  “The right of  trial  by  jury  shall  remain
inviolate . . . .”  Id. at 365 (quoting Conn. Const. art.  I,  §  19).   The
court  then  observed  that  it  “has  long  recognized   that   a   party’s
constitutional right to a civil jury  trial  encompasses  the  right  to  be
present in the court during all phases of the trial,  including  proceedings
prior to the trial on the merits of the case.”  Id.
      In Cary v. Oneok, Inc.,  940  P.2d  201  (Okla.  1997),  the  Oklahoma
Supreme Court reached the same conclusion as the Rozbicki court  relying  on
a different provision in its constitution.  In that case,  the  trial  court
excluded from the courtroom during the liability phase of trial, a six-year-
old plaintiff  who  was  severely  burned  by  an  exploding  water  heater.
According to the trial court, the jury might be sympathetic to  the  child’s
disfigurement.  On appeal, the plaintiff challenged his exclusion.   Relying
on the “open courts”[7] provision in its constitution, the Oklahoma  Supreme
Court concluded that “[a]bsent a voluntary waiver we hold that only  in  the
case  of  extreme  circumstances  may  a  party   be   excluded   from   the
proceedings.”   Id.  at   204.    Finding   neither   waiver   nor   extreme
circumstances, the court remanded the cause for a new trial.   Id.  at  204,
206.  Other courts, have reached similar conclusions without  a  great  deal
of elaboration.  For example, in Mason v.  Moore,  641  N.Y.S.2d  195  (N.Y.
App. Div. 1996), the infant plaintiff sustained severe brain  damage  during
delivery as a result of asphyxia.  The  defendant  unsuccessfully  moved  to
exclude the  infant  plaintiff  from  the  courtroom  during  trial.   On  a
challenge to the  ruling  on  appeal,  the  court  simply  stated  “[i]t  is
axiomatic that, absent an express wavier or unusual circumstances,  a  party
to a civil action is entitled  to  be  present  during  all  stages  of  the
trial.”  Id. at 197.  Finding neither, the court affirmed the  trial  court.
See also Chicago Great W. Ry. Co. v. Beecher, 150 F.2d 394,  399  (8th  Cir.
1945) (holding that the plaintiff, a child under three years of age who  was
struck by a train, properly remained in the courtroom during  trial  despite
the defendant’s objection); Bryant v. Kansas City Rys. Co.,  228  S.W.  472,
475 (Mo. 1921) (holding that the plaintiff, a four-year-old  child  with  an
amputated leg, should be allowed to remain in the courtroom during trial  so
long as he was not paraded in front of the jury to gain sympathy);  Sherwood
v. City of  Sioux  Falls,  73  N.W.  913,  914  (S.D.  1898)  (allowing  the
plaintiff to be brought into the courtroom on a cot despite the  defendant’s
objection that the plaintiff’s appearance would prejudice the jury).

                     E.  Scope of Article I, Section 20


      After examining the historical development of the right  to  trial  by
jury and, in particular, its importance to the founders of this country,  we
agree with those jurisdictions that have held that the state  constitutional
right of trial by jury includes the ancillary right to  be  present  in  the
courtroom during both the liability and damage phase of trial.  This  is  so
because without the right to be present, the right to trial by jury  becomes
meaningless.  We also note, this view is consistent with case law  from  our
Court of Appeals.  See Freimann v. Gallmeier, 116 Ind. App. 170,  63  N.E.2d
150, 153 (1945) (“Citation of authority  is  not  required  to  sustain  the
proposition that a party to an action is entitled to be  personally  present
in court when a trial is held in which he, or she, is a party of  record.”);
Ziegler v. Funkhouser, 42 Ind. App. 428, 85 N.E. 984,  986  (1908)  (“It  is
the right of every party litigant to be present in person in court upon  the
trial of his own case . . . .”).  In our view, the right to  be  present  in
the courtroom during both the liability and damage  phase  of  trial  is  so
basic and fundamental that it is, by implication, guaranteed by  Article  I,
Section 20.  Accordingly, we conclude that the test  announced  in  Gage  is
not sufficient to overcome Shelamiah’s constitutional right  to  be  present
at her own trial.  Rather, absent waiver or extreme circumstances,  a  party
may not be so excluded.

                              III.  Conclusion


      Article I, Section 20 of the Indiana Constitution provides:   “In  all
civil cases, the right of trial  by  jury  shall  remain  inviolate.”   Ind.
Const. art. I, § 20.  We hold that this right includes  also  the  ancillary
right to be present in the courtroom during the liability and  damage  phase
of trial.  Absent waiver or extraordinary circumstances, a party may not  be
so excluded.  Because neither waiver nor extraordinary  circumstances  exist
here, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and  this  cause  remanded
for a new trial.[8]

SHEPARD, C.J., and DICKSON and SULLIVAN, JJ., concur

BOEHM, J., dissents with separate opinion.
BOEHM, Justice.

      I respectfully dissent.  The majority’s  formulation  allows  for  the
possibility that “extraordinary circumstances” can warrant  exclusion  of  a
party.  But if this  case  does  not  present  extraordinary  circumstances,
except for incarcerated litigants it seems that no circumstances could  meet
this test.  It thus is in practical terms an absolute right to a jury  trial
in civil cases.  I agree with  the  majority  that  the  right  to  a  trial
includes a very strong  presumption  that  a  party  has  the  right  to  be
physically  present  at  the  trial.   However,  I  do  not   believe   this
presumption stems from the right to a jury trial in a civil  case.   Nor  in
my view does any other provision of the state or  federal  constitution  bar
exclusion  of  a  party  if  the  trial  court  finds  that   “extraordinary
circumstances” require it.   Accordingly,  I  would  reaffirm  the  standard
announced by the Court of Appeals in Gage v. Bozarth, 505  N.E.2d  64  (Ind.
Ct. App. 1987), and allow a plaintiff to be excluded in a  bifurcated  trial
in the unusual circumstances when a party establishes that  another  party’s
“appearance or conduct is likely to prevent the  jury  from  performing  its
duty” and the trial court has determined  the  other  party  cannot  “assist
counsel in any meaningful way.”  Id. at 67-68.


      The proposition that a party is entitled to  be  present  at  a  civil
trial seems intuitive to most American lawyers and judges.  Yet  the  source
of such a right, if there is one, is rarely explored.   The  presumptive  or
absolute right of a civil litigant to be present at trial is  not  found  in
the text of any provision in either  the  federal  or  state  constitutions.
Until now, Gage was the only relevant precedent in the state.  The Court  of
Appeals in that case held that there is no absolute right to be  present  in
the liability phase of  a  civil  personal  injury  case.   Rather,  if  the
party’s presence did not serve the purpose of assisting counsel,  but  would
risk prejudicing the jury, exclusion may  be  proper.   The  federal  courts
follow the same rule.  See Gonzalez-Marin v. Equitable Life Ins. Soc’y,  845
F.2d 1140, 1146 (1st Cir. 1988); Helminski v. Ayerst Labs.,  766  F.2d  208,
218 (6th Cir. 1985).


      It seems to me that  the  source  of  this  right  is  instructive  in
determining its scope.  I believe the right to be present derives  not  from
the right to a jury trial, but from both the federal right  to  due  process
of law and the concept of fundamental fairness in judicial proceedings  that
is implicit, if not explicit, in our state constitution.  Because  it  stems
from procedural fairness, the right is not absolute  and  must  be  balanced
against considerations of fairness to other parties.  As a result,  I  agree
with the authorities that have concluded there is a right to be  present  if
a party can meaningfully communicate with counsel, but if not, the  presence
of the party is subject to a balancing  test  in  which  fairness  to  other
parties is a proper consideration.  This balancing  is  fact  sensitive  and
deference should be shown to  the  trial  court’s  ruling.   Accordingly,  I
would affirm the trial court.


                    I.  Source of the Right to be Present


      A.  The Right to a Jury Trial
      The majority concludes that the right to be present  is  ancillary  to
the right to trial by jury.  I think this  is  contrary  to  precedent,  and
also leads to incongruous results.
      First, there is little authority for the  view  that  the  jury  trial
right includes an absolute right to be present.  There are some  differences
between state and federal rights to a civil jury.  But  I  am  aware  of  no
difference between the two constitutions in the procedures  to  be  followed
if a jury is required.  Rather, both constitutions purport to  preserve  the
jury right as it existed at common law.  Any  differences  between  the  two
are in the types of lawsuit in which the right to  a  jury  trial  attaches,
not to what that right entails if it applies.   Compare  Songer  v.  Civitas
Bank, 771 N.E.2d 61 (Ind. 2002), with City of Monterey v. Del  Monte  Dunes,
Ltd., 526 U.S. 687 (1999).  Accordingly, federal precedent  is  relevant  in
determining what rights are ancillary to the right to a jury trial.
      As far as I can determine, no federal court has found that  the  right
to be present at trial is guaranteed by the right  to  a  jury  trial  in  a
civil case.  To the contrary, the Seventh Amendment right to  a  jury  trial
does not guarantee a civil litigant an absolute right to be  present  during
the trial.  Federal precedent, like prior Indiana  precedent,  is  clear  on
this point.  See Helminski, 766 F.2d at 213 (noting  due  process,  not  the
Seventh Amendment, is the source of any  right  to  be  present);  see  also
Harris v. King, No. 96-2452, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 36353  at  *3  (8th.  Cir.
1997) (unpublished); Latolais v. Whitley, 93  F.3d  205,  207-08  (5th  Cir.
1996), American Inmate Paralegal Ass’n v. Cline, 859 F.2d 59, 62  (8th  Cir.
1988) (per curiam).
      Finally, if the right is derived from the right to a  jury  trial,  it
would not be equally available in a bench trial.   Although  I  find  little
direct relevant authority, it seems to me that the right to  be  present  is
at least as strong in a bench  trial  where  the  countervailing  factor  of
fairness to the  other  party  may  be  of  diminished  weight.   Thus  both
precedent and reason lead me to reject the jury trial right  as  the  source
of the right to be present.
      B.  Due Process
      Federal cases addressing this issue have  balanced  considerations  of
fairness to the  excluded  party  against  any  prejudice  to  interests  of
others.  See Helminski, 766 F.2d at 213 (party’s appearance is not  alone  a
basis to exclude, but exclusion may be proper  if  there  is  no  meaningful
opportunity to communicate).   Excluding  a  litigant  who  can  effectively
communicate with counsel would deny  the  litigant  the  opportunity  to  be
heard and frustrate the very  notions  of  fairness  that  the  Due  Process
Clause protects.  And I agree that there is  no  merit  to  the  claim  that
retention of counsel waives the right to be  present.   Carlisle  v.  Nassau
County, 408 N.Y.S.2d 114, 117 (N.Y. App. Div. 1978).  But if a party  cannot
assist counsel in any meaningful way,  fairness  to  that  party  becomes  a
factor of diminished weight.  And if the party’s presence may, as Gage  puts
it, “prevent the jury from performing  its  duty,”  fairness  to  the  other
parties is also entitled to consideration.  If that occurs, and there is  no
opportunity for meaningful communication, the balance of  fairness  tips  in
favor of exclusion, and due process does not bar  this  result.   Gage,  505
N.E.2d at 67.  Indeed, weighing the interests involved and  then  barring  a
party from being present occurs with some  regularity  at  the  trial  court
level in other contexts.  For example, challenges to the right to exclude  a
litigant are most prevalent in cases where a litigant is  incarcerated.   In
such cases, the incarcerated civil litigant’s right to  be  present  is  not
absolute.  In determining whether to exclude the litigant,  the  court  must
weigh the prisoner’s  need  to  be  present  against  concerns  of  expense,
security, logistics and docket control.  Muhammad v. Warden, Baltimore  City
Jail, 849 F.2d 107, 111-12 (4th Cir. 1988).  As a  result,  an  incarcerated
civil litigant is  often  barred  from  the  courtroom.   To  be  sure,  the
district court may not  summarily  exclude  a  prisoner-plaintiff  from  the
trial of his civil rights suit.  Ballard v.  Spradley,  557  F.2d  476,  480
(5th Cir. 1977); Stone v. Morris, 546 F.2d 730,  735  (7th  Cir.1976).   But
there are a variety of factors  that  must  be  balanced  in  reaching  this
decision.  Just  as  the  trial  court  has  discretion  to  deny  prisoner-
plaintiffs the right to be present on procedural grounds, in my  view  trial
courts also have discretion to deny other litigants access  to  some  phases
of a trial in those rare cases where that action is appropriate.
      C.  Other State Constitutional Sources
      As the majority notes, Indiana  constitutional  history  sheds  little
light on the presence vel non of an absolute right to be present in a  civil
trial and Gage is the only relevant precedent in this  state.   Most  states
follow  the  federal  rule  in  this  respect  and  permit  exclusion  where
communication is not possible.  See Morley v. Superior Court of  Ariz.,  638
P.2d 1331, 1333 (Ariz.  1985)  (plaintiff  was  in  a  coma  and  unable  to
communicate); Dickson v. Bober, 130 N.W.2d 526, 529 (Minn. 1964)  (plaintiff
unable to comprehend trial or  express  himself);  Province  v.  Center  for
Women’s Health & Family Birth, 25 Cal. Rptr. 2d  667,  675  (Cal.  Ct.  App.
1993) (noting infant unable to  communicate);  Green  v.  N.  Arundel  Hosp.
Ass’n Inc., 785 A.2d 361, 378 (Md.  Ct.  App.  2001)  (plaintiff  could  not
comprehend or participate in the proceeding).  Often this result is  reached
without discussing what, if any, constitutional provision is relevant.
      The majority notes Oklahoma has found a right  to  be  present  to  be
grounded in its constitutional counterpart to the  “open  courts”  provision
found in Article I, §12 of the Indiana Constitution.  Cary v.  Oneok,  Inc.,
940 P.2d 201 (Okla. 1997).  In my view, Cary does  not  support  the  notion
that the right to be present is absolute.  Indeed Cary  itself  states  that
the Oklahoma courts “ha[ve] never held, nor do we hold here that  a  party’s
right to be present  in  the  courtroom  is  absolute.”   Id.  at  204.   In
addition, Cary found that the party  could  assist  counsel.   Id.  at  205.
Under those circumstances, I agree that the balance of fairness must tip  in
favor of permitting the party to attend, but  I  do  not  believe  an  “Open
Courts” provision is a factor in that  result.   More  generally,  the  Open
Courts provision of  the  Indiana  Constitution  assures  all  litigants  an
opportunity to be heard but says nothing  about  the  forum  and  manner  in
which that proceeding is to go forward.  Nothing  in  the  text  or  purpose
supports any particular procedural right.  Rather  it  guarantees  a  remedy
“by due course of law,” but leaves it to the “law” to prescribe what  course
is due.  See McIntosh v. Melroe Co., 729 N.E.2d 972 (Ind. 2000).
      The case law from other jurisdictions finding a right  to  be  present
from other sources is  equally  distinguishable  on  various  grounds.   For
example, Carlisle dealt with whether a party waives its right to be  present
by choosing competent counsel, and does not  deal  with  whether  the  party
could meaningfully assist counsel.  Fla. Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Jones,  60
So. 2d 396 (Fla. 1952), states that the court will not exclude  a  plaintiff
because of physical appearance, but gives no constitutional  basis  for  its
decision.  Rozbicki v. Huybrechts,  589  A.2d  363  (Conn.  1991),  concerns
whether a person who has the right to be  present  at  trial  also  has  the
right to be present during voir  dire,  and  does  not  reach  the  question
concerning whether the right to be present is absolute.  In Mason v.  Moore,
226 A.D.2d 993 (N.Y. App. Div. 1996), the party was  not  excluded  because,
in  part,  his  presence  was  necessary  to  assist  experts  during  their
testimony.  Moreover, Fla. Greyhound Lines, Inc., Bryant v. Kan.  City  Rys.
Co., 228 S.W. 472 (Mo. 1921), and Chicago Great W. Ry. Co. v.  Beecher,  150
F.2d 394 (8th Cir. 1945), all involved  the  review  of  the  trial  court’s
refusal to exclude the plaintiff.  Because the discretion  should  be  given
to the trial court, decisions upholding a refusal to exclude do not  support
an absolute right to be present.
      D.  The Right to a Fair Trial
      Although found in the text of no particular constitutional  provision,
fundamental fairness at judicial proceedings is assumed and required by  the
Indiana Constitution.  Sanchez  v.  State,  749  N.E.2d  509,  514-15  (Ind.
2001).  Similarly, the  Due  Process  Clause  of  the  Fourteenth  Amendment
applies in  state  judicial  proceedings  and  carries  with  it  a  federal
constitutional right to a fair trial in a civil case, albeit no right  to  a
particular result.  See Chicago Council of Lawyers v. Bauer, 522  F.2d  242,
248 (7th Cir. 1975); Bailey v. Systems Innovation, Inc.,  852  F.2d  93,  98
(3d Cir. 1988) (“[F]airness in a jury trial, whether criminal  or  civil  in
nature, is a vital constitutional  right.”);  John  E.  Nowak  &  Ronald  D.
Rotunda,  Constitutional  Law  §  13.8  (6th  ed.  2000)  (the  Constitution
guarantees a fair procedure, not  a  particular  result).   But  this  right
under either the federal or state constitution does not guarantee the  right
to be present.  Rather, it guarantees fundamental fairness to  all  parties.
A claim of right must be evaluated in terms of its impact on others as  well
as  vindication  of  the   interests   of   the   claimants.    When   other
constitutional concerns, such as  due  process,  cannot  be  infringed  upon
because of the factual circumstances of a  particular  case,  the  defendant
should have the opportunity to convince the court that his or her  right  to
a fair trial will be in jeopardy unless the plaintiff is barred  during  the
liability  phase  of  a  trial.   In  other  words,  if  a  civil  trial  is
bifurcated, and the plaintiff cannot meaningfully aide  counsel,  this  same
principle of fairness permits a party the opportunity to show  that  a  fair
trial requires the exclusion of an opposing party in the liability phase.
                        II.   Exclusion in This Case
      Here, the trial court made a determination that the  presence  of  the
plaintiff would be “highly prejudicial  to  the  Defendants”  and  that  the
plaintiff “could not testify about  the  events  related  to  liability  and
could not aid in the presentation of Plaintiff[’]s  case.”   The  child  has
numerous physical and mental  disabilities,  including  cerebral  palsy  and
Erb’s palsy.  I do not suggest that these conditions  in  any  way  diminish
her due process rights.  But neither  do  they  overcome  the  right  of  an
opponent to a fair trial.  In the unusual circumstance where a party  cannot
meaningfully assist counsel and the  party’s  presence  may  impair  a  fair
trial, a trial court judge should be vested with the discretion  to  exclude
the party.  Here, the trial court judge had the opportunity to  observe  the
child in a videotaped deposition and assess her ability to aid  counsel  and
the potential affect of her appearance  on  a  jury.   The  child  also  was
unable to  testify  about  any  matters  concerning  the  liability  of  the
defendants.  I do not believe that based on  these  facts  the  trial  court
judge abused his discretion  in  determining  that  her  appearance,  though
highly relevant to damages, was not a proper factor in the liability phase.
      In short, the trial court found that the defendant’s right to  a  fair
trial would be infringed by plaintiff’s presence, and that the  due  process
rights of the plaintiff would not be meaningfully impaired by  her  absence.
This finding is highly fact sensitive and should be reviewed under an  abuse
of discretion standard.  Fobar v. Vonderahe, 771 N.E.2d 57, 59  (Ind.  2002)
(trial court’s application of law to a fact sensitive  inquiry  is  reviewed
for an abuse of discretion), Gage, 505 N.E.2d at 67 (trial courts  have  the
discretion to exclude plaintiffs).
      Just as courts  often  exclude  evidence  if  its  prejudicial  effect
outweighs its probative value, courts may exclude a party  when  it  can  be
demonstrated that his or her presence would be prejudicial and  the  absence
of the litigant would not impair other constitutional guarantees because  of
the party’s inability to assist counsel.  Even if the presence  of  a  party
is significantly prejudicial, other interests—most frequently the  right  to
assist counsel—may nevertheless require the party’s presence.   But  in  the
absence of a showing of the impairment of those interests, exclusion may  be
ordered.  That is a matter for trial court discretion and I would  not  find
it abused in this case.

-----------------------
      [1]  Shoulder dystocia occurs when an infant’s shoulder becomes lodged
behind the mother’s pubic bone and impedes its progress  through  the  birth
canal.  The Merck Manual 1906 (Robert Berkow, M.D., ed., 16th ed. 1992).


      [2]  See R. at 1149.
      [3]  The record shows: Shelamiah suffers from cerebral  palsy  in  all
four extremities and Erb’s  palsy  in  the  left  arm,  cannot  talk,  makes
involuntary movements and sounds, is sight impaired, and walks with the  use
of braces and a walker.  R. at 42-43,  1149.   There  is  a  dispute  as  to
whether Shelamiah  can  understand  the  proceedings  and  communicate  with
counsel with the use of a laptop computer.  R. at 73, 76, 118.
      [4]  Meeting in 1774, The First Continental  Congress  resolved  among
other things “‘the respective colonies are entitled to  the  common  law  of
England, and more especially to  the  great  and  inestimable  privilege  of
being tried by their peers of the vicinage, according to the course of  that
law.’”   Landsman,  supra,  at  596  (quotation  omitted).   The  colonists’
concern  about  jury  trials  was  reiterated  in  the  Second   Continental
Congress’ Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms,  issued
in  July  1775,  which  specifically  challenged  Parliament’s  passage   of
statutes “‘depriving . . . [the colonies] of the accustomed and  inestimable
privilege of trial by jury, in cases affecting  both  life  and  property.’”
Id. (quotation omitted).


      [5]  By 1788, eight of the eleven states had incorporated the right to
trial by jury in civil cases into their  constitutions:   Pennsylvania,  New
Jersey, Georgia, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Hampshire,
Virginia, and New York.  Rachael E. Schwartz,  “Everything  Depends  on  How
You  Draw  the  Lines”:   An  Alternative  Interpretation  of  the   Seventh
Amendment, 6 Seton Hall Const. L.J. 599, 617-18  (1996).   Today,  the  vast
majority of states guarantee the right to trial by jury in  civil  cases  in
their constitutions.  See Ora  Fred  Harris,  Jr.,  Complex  Product  Design
Litigation:  A Need for More Capable Fact-Finders,  79  Ky.  L.J.  477,  482
(1991).


      [6]  Article I, Section 13(a) of the Indiana  Constitution  guarantees
the right to trial by jury in criminal cases.  See Ind.  Const.  art.  I,  §
13(a).
      [7]  Article II, Section 6 of the Oklahoma  Constitution  provides  in
part, “The courts of justice of the State shall be open to every person .  .
. .”  Okla. Const. art. II, § 6.  Similarly, Article I, Section  12  of  the
Indiana Constitution  provides:   “All  courts  shall  be  open;  and  every
person, for injury done to him  in  his  person,  property,  or  reputation,
shall have remedy by due course  of  law.   Justice  shall  be  administered
freely, and without purchase; completely, and without denial;  speedily  and
without delay.”  Ind. Const. art. I, § 12 (emphasis added).
      [8]  We decline to articulate a bright-line rule to determine what are
and what are not “extraordinary circumstances.”   Such  determinations  must
be made on a case-by-case basis.  We merely  observe  that  on  this  record
extraordinary circumstances have not been shown.