#26088-aff in pt, rev in pt & rem-JKK
2012 S.D. 62
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
****
JOHN CHRISTIAN WALTER, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
JOHN EDWARD FUKS, Defendant and Appellant.
****
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
YANKTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
****
THE HONORABLE GLEN W. ENG
Judge
****
SCOTT G. HOY
BRAM WEIDENAAR
JAMES L. HOY of
Hoy Trial Lawyers, LLC
Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and
appellee.
GARY D. JENSEN
JESSICA L. LARSON of
Beardsley, Jensen, & Von Wald, LLC
Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant and
appellant.
****
ARGUED ON MARCH 20, 2012
OPINION FILED 08/29/12
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KONENKAMP, Justice
[¶1.] While driving a farm tractor down a county road, defendant turned
unexpectedly and struck plaintiff’s motorcycle as plaintiff was trying to pass on the
right. At trial, defendant asserted that plaintiff was driving under the influence of
alcohol at the time and was barred from recovering based on contributory
negligence and assumption of the risk. A jury returned a verdict for plaintiff. On
appeal, we conclude that the circuit court erroneously instructed the jury on the
presumptions applicable only to criminal prosecutions for DUI. Also, plaintiff’s
repeated violations of the court’s in limine order, improperly disclosing that plaintiff
was not prosecuted for DUI, unfairly suggested to the jury that law enforcement
officials had effectively resolved the issue whether plaintiff was driving under the
influence.
Background
[¶2.] On May 19, 2009, John Walter and Dale Morck drove their motorcycles
in and around the Yankton and Springfield areas of South Dakota. They stopped at
various bars and got their books stamped as part of a summer-long poker run.
Their first stop was at a bar outside of Yankton around 2:25 p.m. There, they each
consumed one beer. Walter recalled that over the course of the next two hours, he
and Morck stopped at three more establishments, and he drank a little over three
more beers. Morck, on the other hand, remembered stopping at a total of five bars
and that he and Walter consumed about six beers each. They left the last bar
around 4:30 p.m. to head back to Springfield.
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[¶3.] On their way home, Walter and Morck proceeded north on Highway
81. They turned west onto 306th Street, a paved county road, and headed toward
Tabor. Shortly afterwards, Walter and Morck noticed a tractor on the road, heading
west. John Fuks (now deceased) was driving his tractor five to ten miles per hour
and was on his way to a field to help a friend. Walter and Morck slowed as they
neared the tractor. What happened next is disputed. Walter claimed that Fuks
drove his tractor from the westbound lane to the eastbound lane and stopped off the
road, momentarily. Fuks maintained that he crossed the centerline, never stopped
his tractor, and drove partially in the eastbound lane. He intended to make a left-
hand turn into a field approach, and to do so successfully, he swung the front of his
tractor to the right just before turning. Morck said Fuks’s tractor crossed the
centerline and was partially in the eastbound lane when Fuks suddenly veered
right. What happened thereafter is undisputed. When Fuks swung the front of his
tractor to the right, the attached bucket entered the westbound lane, struck
Walter’s motorcycle, and sent Walter into the ditch.
[¶4.] After the accident, Fuks drove his tractor back to his farm, a short
distance away. While he was gone, an ambulance arrived. Teresa Holland, an EMT
from Tabor, tended to Walter. She found him with significant injuries, but she
smelled no odor of an alcoholic beverage. Yankton County Deputy Sheriff Dan
Christianson also arrived on the scene. By this time, Fuks had returned. Officer
Christianson took statements from Fuks and Morck. He also issued Morck a
preliminary breath test for alcohol, which indicated a blood alcohol content (BAC) of
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.055%. Because Morck’s BAC was below the legal limit of .08%, Officer
Christianson told Morck he was free to leave.
[¶5.] Walter was taken by helicopter to Sioux Falls for treatment. There, a
blood sample was drawn at 6:25 p.m. The test showed a BAC of .058%. A second
blood sample was drawn around 7:38 p.m., at the request of investigating officers,
and was forwarded to the State Chemical Laboratory in Pierre. Roger Mathison, a
chemist for the State, determined Walter’s BAC to be .042%. By extrapolation,
Mathison concluded that at the time of the accident, Walter’s BAC would have been
.087%.
[¶6.] As a result of the accident, Walter sustained compound fractures of his
left elbow, pelvis, and knee, requiring multiple surgeries. He missed eight months
of work as a correctional officer at the Mike Durfee State Prison. In the end, he
sustained a 9% whole person impairment rating and incurred $160,745 in
medically-related expenses.
[¶7.] Walter sued Fuks for negligence. Fuks answered denying negligence
and asserting the affirmative defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of
the risk. He later moved for summary judgment asserting that Walter was legally
under the influence of an alcoholic beverage at the time of the accident, making him
contributorily negligent more than slight. As support, Fuks offered an affidavit
from Mathison that Walter’s BAC at the time of the accident was .087%, above the
legal limit of .08%. The circuit court denied the motion.
[¶8.] Among other pretrial motions, Fuks moved to prevent Walter from
eliciting testimony or offering evidence that Walter was not criminally prosecuted
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as a result of his BAC at the time of the accident. The court granted the motion,
declaring that no questions could be asked “regarding any citation, charge of a
criminal nature that was — was brought or was not brought.” But later during a
deposition, counsel for Walter asked a witness if he was aware if Walter “was ever
arrested” for a DUI. When Fuks’s counsel objected, saying that the question
violated the court’s in limine ruling, Walter’s counsel responded that “we were
instructed not to talk about the charges and I’m talking about arrest by a police
officer and I think that’s different[.]” Consequently, Fuks made another motion in
limine, which the court granted, saying, “The court is going to limit any questions
regarding arrests, citations, as previously ordered.” Counsel were instructed to
approach the bench if they believed the other side had opened the door for
questioning related to any criminal prosecution.
[¶9.] A jury trial was held in May 2011. Fuks admitted negligence, leaving
for the jury the issues of causation, contributory negligence, assumption of the risk,
and damages. To prove Walter was under the influence of an alcoholic beverage,
Fuks offered expert testimony that based on Walter’s .087% BAC at the time of the
accident, Walter would have experienced a “feeling of euphoria, of well-being,
everything is good and it’s going to stay good, going to charge through, don’t really
stop and think about all the consequences, all the things that could go wrong as you
would if you were sober and a sober person may well judge the situation completely
differently and might have stopped before the tractor had a chance to turn in on
him.” Fuks argued that had Walter not been drinking he would have avoided the
tractor bucket as Morck was able to do. Walter, on the other hand, presented
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evidence that his BAC was .062% at the time of the accident, that no one thought he
appeared to be under the influence of alcohol, and that he operated his motorcycle
as an ordinary person would have under the circumstances.
[¶10.] The jury found for Walter. By special verdict, it concluded that Fuks’s
negligence was the legal cause of Walter’s injuries, and that Walter was
contributorily negligent, but not more than slight. Walter was awarded $520,754.
[¶11.] In his motion for a new trial or judgment as a matter of law, Fuks
argued that Walter committed misconduct during the trial when he violated the
court’s in limine orders. In particular, Fuks alleged that Walter improperly and
prejudicially injected issues concerning Fuks’s insurance and financial status, as
well as Walter’s lack of criminal prosecution and his sexual dysfunction. Fuks
further asserted that the court abused its discretion when it allowed Walter to
examine non-legal experts on the criminal laws related to driving under the
influence, and allowed Walter to examine a witness beyond the scope of the prior
examination. Finally, Fuks argued that it was improper and prejudicial for the
court to instruct the jury on the presumptions applicable to a criminal prosecution
for driving under the influence. His motions were denied.
[¶12.] Fuks appeals asserting that (1) Walter committed misconduct during
the trial when he improperly injected the issues of insurance, financial status, lack
of criminal prosecution, and sexual dysfunction into the trial, (2) the court abused
its discretion with certain evidentiary rulings, (3) Instruction 19A on DUI
presumptions was improper and prejudicial, and (4) the court erred when it denied
his motion for a judgment as a matter of law that Walter was legally under the
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influence of alcohol, and therefore, contributorily negligent more than slight. As
they are dispositive, we address only the DUI presumptions instruction and the
violations of the in limine order regarding lack of prosecution.
1. Jury Instruction on DUI Presumptions
[¶13.] Walter requested a jury instruction on the presumptions applicable to
criminal prosecutions for driving under the influence. He asked the court to
instruct the jury that if a person’s BAC is .05% or less, the person is presumed not
to be under the influence, and if a person’s BAC is more than .05%, but less than
.08%, there is no presumption that the person was or was not under the influence of
an alcoholic beverage. See SDCL 32-23-7. Fuks objected on grounds that the
presumptions only apply to criminal prosecutions. In agreeing to give the
instruction, the circuit court explained: “I understand that it is normally a criminal
presumption, but the court believes that many of the things here are criminal in
nature and we give the instruction because that’s what the law is.” The court also
allowed Mathison to testify, over Fuks’s objection, about these presumptions.
[¶14.] Fuks relies on Fossum v. Zurn, 78 S.D. 260, 272, 100 N.W.2d 805, 811
(1960). There, this Court ruled that the predecessor to SDCL 32-23-7 only applies
to criminal prosecutions. Fuks further argues that courts across the nation have
limited the application of such criminal statutes to criminal cases. Walter, on the
other hand, asserts that since Fossum, this Court has incorporated the
presumptions in a worker’s compensation case and a civil case on punitive damages.
See Therkildsen v. Fisher Beverage, 1996 S.D. 39, ¶ 12, 545 N.W.2d 834, 837;
Flockhart v. Wyant, 467 N.W.2d 473, 477 (S.D. 1991). Moreover, Walter argues that
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the statutory presumptions are relevant any time drinking and driving become an
issue in a case and a blood test is offered on the question whether a person was
under the influence of alcohol.
[¶15.] Instruction 19A told the jury:
An analysis of the Plaintiff’s blood taken after the accident has
been received as evidence. The amount of alcohol in the
Plaintiff’s blood at the time alleged as shown by chemical
analysis may give rise to the following presumptions:
1. If there was .05 percent or less by weight of alcohol in the
defendant’s [sic] blood, it shall be presumed that the defendant
[sic] was not under the influence of an alcoholic beverage.
2. If there was in excess of .05 percent, but less than .08 percent
by weight of alcohol in the defendant’s [sic] blood, such fact shall
not give rise to any presumption that the defendant [sic] was or
was not under the influence of an alcoholic beverage.
These presumptions created by statute are not conclusive and
may be considered in connection with all other evidence
submitted in the case.
The wording of this instruction came from SDCL 32-23-7, which begins, “In any
criminal prosecution. . . .” (Emphasis added.) This statute contains a third
presumption that one is presumed to be under the influence when that person’s
BAC is above .08%, but the circuit court did not include that presumption in
Instruction 19A. 1 See id.
1. In addition to the presumption instructions, the jury was given the following
instructions without objection:
Instruction 19
No person may drive or be in actual or physical control of any
vehicle while:
(continued . . .)
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[¶16.] Trial courts have broad discretion in instructing a jury, but their
instructions must provide a full and correct statement of the law. Papke v. Harbert,
2007 S.D. 87, ¶ 13, 738 N.W.2d 510, 515 (citations omitted). Because Fuks is
challenging an instruction, he bears the burden of proving that the instruction was
not only erroneous, but also prejudicial. See id. (citing First Premier Bank v.
Kolcraft Enter., Inc., 2004 S.D. 92, ¶ 40, 686 N.W.2d 430, 448). To be prejudicial,
the erroneous instruction must have in all probability produced some effect upon
the verdict and be harmful to the substantial rights of a party. Id.
[¶17.] We have not previously addressed whether it is proper in a civil case to
instruct a jury on the criminal presumptions in SDCL 32-23-7. 2 A review of cases
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(. . . continued)
(1) There is 0.08 percent or more by weight of alcohol in that
person’s blood as shown by chemical analysis of that person’s
breath, blood, or other bodily substance; or
(2) Under the influence of an alcoholic beverage.
This statute sets the standard of care of a reasonable person. If
you find that John Walter violated the statute, such violation is
negligence.
Instruction 20
A person is under the influence of an alcoholic beverage when as
a result of drinking an alcoholic beverage his physical or mental
abilities are impaired to the extent that the person is not able to
drive a vehicle in the manner a person of ordinary prudence
would drive under the same or similar circumstances.
2. In Flockhart, SDCL 32-23-7 was not incorporated or otherwise relied upon at
the trial level or in deciding the appeal. On appeal, this Court merely used
the presumptions to emphasize the undisputed condition of the driver. See
467 N.W.2d at 477. While the presumptions of SDCL 32-23-7 were used in
Therkildsen, the Court made clear its application was limited to the worker’s
(continued . . .)
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from other jurisdictions reveals that a clear majority of courts hold that such an
instruction is improper. Bach v. Penn Cent. Transp. Co., 502 F.2d 1117, 1120 (6th
Cir. 1974) (reversible error); Wilson v. Coston, 390 S.W.2d 445, 446 (Ark. 1965)
(reversible error); Wood v. Brown, 201 S.E.2d 225, 228 (N.C. Ct. App. 1973);
Ackerman v. Delcomico, 486 A.2d 410, 414-15 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1984); Patton v. Tubbs,
402 P.2d 355, 356 (Wash. 1965); Combined Ins. Co. of Am. v. Sinclair, 584 P.2d
1034, 1047-48 (Wyo. 1978). But see Divine v. Groshong, 679 P.2d 700, 708-09 (Kan.
1984). The prevailing reason for rejecting the presumption instruction in civil cases
is that the plain language of the presumption statutes refer to criminal prosecutions
or criminal cases. Another convincing reason, particularly applicable to this case, is
that a BAC should not be considered exclusively. With the presumption instruction,
the jury would not need to consider other evidence of impairment showing that a
person acted negligently. One of the critical issues here was whether Walter was
under the influence of alcohol, a question the jury had to determine from all the
evidence, not simply from a series of criminal presumptions.
[¶18.] In accord with most other jurisdictions, we conclude that our
presumptions statute, SDCL 32-23-7, is inapplicable to negligence actions. The
statute’s language provides for application in “criminal prosecutions.” As other
courts have declared, such an instruction is an improper comment on the evidence
__________________
(. . . continued)
compensation case involving an employee’s injury while using a motor
vehicle. See 1996 S.D. 39, ¶ 12, 545 N.W.2d at 837.
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and constitutes reversible error. This instruction was also prejudicial, as it both
confused the issues and clouded the burden of proof.
2. Violations of In Limine Orders
[¶19.] Fuks contends that Walter’s multiple violations of the court’s rulings
in limine were prejudicial and denied him a fair trial. We think the circuit court
adequately addressed most of the violations at the time they occurred. One
violation, however, deserves further comment and condemnation. Walter
repeatedly attempted to bring in the fact that he was not charged or prosecuted for
DUI. During Walter’s direct examination, his attorney asked whether he had “to
answer any questions in any kind of a — other courtroom process?” Although
Fuks’s objection was sustained, the jury heard the question. Then, during
Mathison’s cross examination, Walter was allowed, over objection, to ask Mathison
if he had been “asked by any prosecutor to come and testify,” to which Mathison
answered, “No.” Mathison was then asked, “Did you tell [counsel] in his deposition
that you wouldn’t recommend prosecution?” This was the very subject Walter was
instructed not to raise. Fuks objected before Mathison could answer. The objection
was sustained, and the court instructed the jury to disregard the question. A
motion for mistrial was denied.
[¶20.] Once highly prejudicial matters are brought before the jury, objections
and instructions to disregard cannot always dispel the harmful effect. Kjerstad v.
Ravellette Publ’ns Inc., 517 N.W.2d 419, 427 (S.D. 1994) (citation omitted). One
advantage to a ruling “in limine is not having to object in the jury’s presence. . . .”
Id. at 427. In this way, the prejudicial impact from asking questions and making
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objections on inadmissible evidence before the jury is alleviated. Under our rules,
“[i]n jury cases, proceedings shall be conducted, to the extent practicable, so as to
prevent inadmissible evidence from being suggested to the jury by any means, such
as making statements or offers of proof or asking questions in the hearing of the
jury.” SDCL 19-9-5 (Rule 103(c)).
[¶21.] Walter was clearly prohibited from broaching, through testimony or
otherwise, the fact that he was not charged criminally. By disclosing he was not
prosecuted for DUI, he was able to suggest to the jury that law enforcement
authorities had effectively resolved the issue whether he was driving under the
influence. Counsel for Walter later excused this as merely asking an “inartful
question.” But this will not do. Litigants and their attorneys bear the
responsibility to follow punctiliously a court’s in limine orders. Walter also
contends that Fuks opened the door to questions about lack of criminal prosecution.
Yet Walter was specifically instructed that in such an event he was to approach the
bench and ask permission before posing any questions on this forbidden subject.
See Kjerstad, 517 N.W.2d at 427. That never happened.
[¶22.] We review denials of mistrial and new trial motions for an abuse of
discretion. Schmidt v. Royer, 1998 S.D. 5, ¶ 9, 574 N.W.2d 618, 621. “[I]ntentional
introduction of prejudicial evidence through a violation of [an in limine ruling] can
serve as the basis for a new trial.” Loen v. Anderson, 2005 S.D. 9, ¶ 16, 692 N.W.2d
194, 199 (citing First Premier Bank, 2004 S.D. 92, ¶ 6, 686 N.W.2d at 436)
(additional citations omitted). For a violation of an in limine order to serve as the
basis of a new trial, (1) the order must be specific in its prohibitions, (2) the
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violation must be clear, and (3) the violation must be prejudicial. Kjerstad, 517
N.W.2d at 426. “Prejudicial error is error which in all probability produced some
effect upon the jury’s verdict and is harmful to the substantial rights of the party
assigning it.” Id. (citation omitted). We conclude that the in limine order was
specific; in fact, it was given twice. Also the violation was clear. And in all
probability it produced some effect upon the jury’s verdict and was harmful to
Fuks’s right to a fair trial. See id. Thus, the circuit court abused its discretion in
not granting a new trial.
[¶23.] Finally, as to Fuks’s claim that he was entitled to a judgment as a
matter of law on Walter’s contributory negligence, we think the circuit court
properly denied the motion because there were factual questions to resolve. We
need not address Fuks’s remaining issues because we reverse and remand for a new
trial, and we trust that based on our decision today and the circuit court’s previous
rulings, these issues will not arise again.
[¶24.] Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for a new trial.
[¶25.] GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and ZINTER, SEVERSON, and
WILBUR, Justices, concur.
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