Air Safety, Inc. v. Roman Catholic Archbishop of Boston

                  United States Court of Appeals
                      For the First Circuit

                                           

No. 95-1920

                        AIR SAFETY, INC.,
                  A/K/A AIR SAFETY ENGINEERING,

                      Plaintiff, Appellant,

                                v.

     ROMAN CATHOLIC ARCHBISHOP OF BOSTON, A CORPORATION SOLE
     AND CHRISTIAN BROTHERS INSTITUTE OF MASSACHUSETTS, INC.,

                      Defendants, Appellees.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. Reginald C. Lindsay, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                 

                                           

                              Before

                      Stahl, Circuit Judge,
                                                    
                  Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        
                  and Cummings,* Circuit Judge.
                                                        

                                           

     William M. Simmons with whom Nancy G. O'Donnell was on brief
                                                              
for appellant.
     Francis J. O'Connor with whom Wilson D. Rogers, Jr., was on
                                                                  
brief for appellee Roman Catholic Archbishop of Boston.
     Regina Williams Tate with whom William J. Egan was on brief
                                                             
for appellee Christian Brothers Institute of Massachusetts, Inc.

                                           

                         August 21, 1996

                                           

                    
                              

     *Of the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation.


     COFFIN, Senior  Circuit Judge.   Appellant Air  Safety, Inc.
                                            

filed  this diversity  suit  seeking payments  allegedly due  for

asbestos  removal at  six  Boston area  parochial  schools.   The

defendants, the Roman Catholic  Archbishop of Boston ("RCAB") and

the  Christian Brothers  Institute  of Massachusetts,  Inc. ("the

Institute"),  filed counterclaims  alleging damages  arising from

Air Safety's work.1  The bottom line after a series of rulings by

the  court  and  the  jury  was a  net  award  in  favor  of each

defendant.   Air  Safety asserts  two claims  on appeal:  (1) the

district  court abused  its  discretion  in  refusing to  hold  a

partial  new  trial  on  negligence  damages,  which  Air  Safety

contends were  excessive and unsupported  by the record;  and (2)

the district  court erred  in excluding crucial  exhibits showing

Air Safety's overhead costs, requiring a partial new trial on its
                                                                           

damages  against  the  RCAB  and  the  Institute.    We  find  no

reversible error  in the  court's evidentiary ruling,  but vacate

and  remand  for a  new trial  on  the negligence  damages unless

defendants accept a proposed remittitur.

                      I. Factual Background
                                                     

     This  case  originated in  Air  Safety's  successful bid  to

remove asbestos at six schools owned by the defendants.  The work

began  in the  summer  of 1988.    Conflicts arose  over  various

aspects  of the project,  including the  quality of  Air Safety's

performance and the defendants'  obligations to pay for completed

                    
                              

     1 RCAB is the owner of five of the schools.  The Institute
owns the sixth, Catholic Memorial High School.

                               -2-


work.   Air Safety filed suit to obtain payment, asserting claims

for breach  of contract,  for payments  on an  "account stated,"2

and, as alternative relief, for quantum meruit.  The RCAB and the

Institute   filed  counterclaims  for   breach  of  contract  and

negligence.3

     During the  course of  pre-trial  proceedings, the  district

court  allowed Air Safety's account stated claim in the amount of

$328,738  for  the five  schools owned  by  the RCAB,  but stayed

enforcement  of   the  judgment  until  all   other  claims  were

resolved.4   Following  a twelve-day trial,  the jury  found that

neither the RCAB nor the  Institute had breached their contracts,

but that  Air Safety  had done  so.  It  found, however,  that no

breach of contract damages had been suffered by either defendant.

The jury  also  determined that  Air Safety  was responsible  for

                    
                              

     2 An "account stated" claim is one based on an
acknowledgement of an existing liability for a specified amount,
from which the law implies a promise to pay.  Rizkalla v.
                                                                
Abusamra, 187 N.E. 602, 603 (Mass. 1933).
                  

     3 Other causes of action not of significance here were
dismissed.

     4 Two aspects of the account stated portion of the case need
clarification.  First, the proceeding affected only the RCAB and
its five schools because the Institute had not yet been made a
party; Air Safety did not realize at the outset of the litigation
that the sixth school, Catholic Memorial High School, was owned
by a separate entity.  It subsequently filed a First Amended and
Supplemental Complaint adding the Institute as a defendant.
     Second, the account stated award was reduced after trial,
based on amounts paid by the RCAB, to $62,249.97.

                               -3-


negligence damages, but  that it was  entitled to quantum  meruit

relief.  The net result was awards in favor of both defendants.5

     Air  Safety filed a motion  for new trial  on the negligence

damages, claiming that  the amounts awarded were not supported by

the  evidence.  After  briefing and  oral argument,  the district

court denied the motion in a margin order.  This appeal followed.

                      II. Negligence Damages
                                                      

     Air Safety  contends that  the jury's negligence  awards far

exceed the record evidence of damage.  It maintains that the RCAB

established  only  $21,672 in  damages,  while  the jury  awarded

$235,000.  It further claims  that the Institute's proven damages

totaled only  $85,894, compared with  a jury  award of  $138,000.

The district court rejected Air Safety's request through a motion

for new trial to revisit the issue of negligence damages, and Air

Safety now urges us to find that that ruling was erroneous.

     Our review is narrow.  A district court's denial of a motion

for new  trial may be  reversed only for an  abuse of discretion.

Ahern  v. Scholz,  85 F.3d  774,  780 (1st  Cir. 1996).   "`In  a
                          

challenge  to a jury award,  [the appellate court]  is limited to

                    
                              

     5 The judgment specified the following amounts, plus
interest:

(a) quantum meruit from the RCAB to Air Safety: $87,000;
(b) quantum meruit from the Institute to Air Safety: $63,100;
(c) account stated from the RCAB to Air Safety: $62,249.97;
(cont'd)

(cont'd from page 3)
(c) negligence damages to the RCAB from Air Safety: $235,500;
(d) negligence damages to the Institute from Air Safety:
$138,100.

                               -4-


examining whether  evidence in  the record supports  the verdict.

If  the jury  award has  a rational  basis in  evidence,  we must

affirm it.'"  Nydam v. Lennerton, 948 F.2d  808, 810-11 (1st Cir.
                                          

1991)  (quoting O'Brien v. Papa Gino's of America, Inc., 780 F.2d
                                                                 

1067,  1076   (1st  Cir.   1986)).    Under   Massachusetts  law,

uncertainty  as to  the  amount of  damages  does not  bar  their

recovery,  see Stuart v. Town of Brookline, 587 N.E.2d 1384, 1387
                                                    

(Mass. 1992), but a plaintiff "`must establish [its] claim upon a

solid foundation in  fact, and cannot recover  when any essential

element is left to  conjecture, surmise or hypothesis,'" Snelling
                                                                           

&  Snelling of Massachusetts, Inc.  v. Wall, 189  N.E.2d 231, 232
                                                     

(Mass.  1963) (quoting John Hetherington &  Sons, Ltd. v. William
                                                                           

Firth Co., 95 N.E. 961, 964 (Mass. 1911)).  See  also Hendricks &
                                                                           

Assocs., Inc. v. Daewoo Corp., 923 F.2d 209, 217 (1st Cir. 1991);
                                       

Puritan Medical  Ctr., Inc.  v. Cashman,  596  N.E.2d 1004,  1013
                                                 

(Mass. 1992).

     Despite  the confines of our inquiry, our examination of the

trial  transcript requires  us  to conclude  that the  negligence

awards  cannot  stand.   The  evidence  in  the  record fails  to

substantiate the amounts imposed; even  a generous reading of the

testimony supports  only a small  portion of  the damages  beyond

those  conceded by Air Safety  on appeal.   We discuss separately

the results of our study with respect to each defendant.

     The RCAB.  Air Safety contends that the record supports only
                       

$21,672  in damages for  the cost  of a  temporary boiler  at St.

Theresa's school.    The  jury  awarded  $235,000.    Our  search

                               -5-


revealed  three  additional  items   that  the  jury  could  have

attributed  to Air  Safety's negligence:  extra clean-up  work by

custodians at St. Theresa's for which Rev. Helmick testified that

he "paid  a lot;" damage to  a clock and bell  system; and $7,400

for painting at St. William's school.   No amounts for either the

custodial  time or the clock  repair were presented  to the jury,

although the  district court reported in a June 20, 1990 Order on

the  parties'  summary judgment  motions  that  those items  were

alleged to cost $4,377 and $272.50, respectively.

     We  think it  within  reason  for  the  jury  to  choose  to

compensate the RCAB for these asserted harms, despite the lack of

testimony on specific  dollar amounts.6  This is  not the sort of

conjecture  barred by  Massachusetts law in  calculating damages,

but simply a matter of imprecision with respect to the amount for

a  specifically  identified  harm.   The  gap  challenged  by Air

Safety,  however,  is  far  greater than  any  reasonable  figure

attributable  to these additional harms.  We think an appropriate

recovery for them  would be the amounts  previously identified by

the RCAB, totaling $12,049.50.

     The  RCAB points to one additional expense that the jury may

have attributed to Air  Safety: the $57,971.80 difference between

the  contract  price for  Mission  High School  and  the combined
                    
                              

     6 The record arguably is ambiguous as to whether Air Safety
did the necessary painting at St. William's.  On cross-
examination, Air Safety's witness, John Murphy, acknowledged that
it was his company's responsibility to paint areas damaged by the
asbestos removal process, but was unsure whether the work had
been done.  He testified: "I would have to look back.  I thought
we painted the floor."

                               -6-


amount of Air Safety's  account stated claim for Mission  and the

amount  paid  to  a new  contractor  to  complete  the work  left

unfinished by Air Safety.  In other words, the RCAB contends that

the record showed that  it paid nearly $58,000 more  for asbestos

removal at  Mission  High School  than  the Air  Safety  contract

price.

     We  have  two problems  with this  contention.   First, this

differential amount  between the original contract  price and the

amount  actually expended  to  get the  job  done is  classically

breach  of contract  damages.    The  jury, however,  awarded  no

damages for the breach.7

     Second, and  more significantly,  there was no  testimony or

argument at trial concerning the $58,000.  In closing, the RCAB's

attorney pointed out (consistent with Rev. Ryan's testimony) that

it cost $105,000 to complete the contract work left unfinished by

Air  Safety;  he  did  not  assert,  however,  that  that  amount

represented  higher charges for work Air Safety had contracted to

perform  for less.  Although the original contract amount and Air

Safety's  account  stated  claim  both were  contained  in  trial

exhibits,  there was  no basis for  the jurors  to have  made the

calculation now  offered  by  the  RCAB to  undergird  its  award

without the crucial $58,000 figure having been explained to them.

                    
                              

     7 We recognize that the district court explicitly told the
jurors that they may award damages "only once for each harm," and
that the jury, for convenience, might have decided to classify
all damages under the negligence rubric.

                               -7-


     We  think it  likely that the  huge discrepancy  between the

damages actually  proven and  the amount  awarded stems  from the

jury's effort to compensate the RCAB and the parents and students

attending the five affected schools for the trouble caused by Air

Safety's negligent  work.  Beyond the  fact that the RCAB  has no

claim  to damages for discomfort  suffered by others  is the fact

that  this case  involves property  damage, not  personal injury.

See  generally Guaranty-First  Trust Co.  v. Textron,  622 N.E.2d
                                                              

597, 599 (Mass. 1993) (under common law, if injury to property is

reasonably curable by  repairs, the expense  of repairs, if  less

than  diminished  market  value,  is the  measure  of  recovery);

Michael B.  Bogdanow, Massachusetts  Tort Damages    9.03 (1995).
                                                           

It goes without saying that a breach of contract or the negligent

performance of  a contractual  obligation will impose  burdens on

the  wronged party,  but compensation  is limited to  making that

party whole.8

     Moreover, even if harm  in the nature of pain  and suffering

were  compensable in  this context,  such damages  would be  rank

speculation  here.    No  testimony  was  presented  of  specific

intangible injuries  to the RCAB or its  officials as a result of

Air Safety's conduct.  The general reference in counsel's closing

argument  to "frustration," "aggravation," and "inconvenience" --

byproducts of any tort or  breach of contract -- is far  from the

                    
                              

     8 Although loss-of-use damages are recoverable, the RCAB
made no showing of such losses.

                               -8-


"solid foundation in  fact," Snelling &  Snelling, 189 N.E.2d  at
                                                           

232, necessary to support an award of damages.9

     We  therefore conclude  that,  unless the  RCAB agrees  to a

remittitur of  $201,278.50 -- reducing its  negligence damages to

$33,721.50 -- Air Safety is entitled to a partial new trial.  See
                                                                           

Anthony,  17 F.3d  at  495 (appellate  court  has the  option  of
                 

selecting a reduced damages figure or remanding to district court

to determine damages). 

     The  Institute.   Air  Safety acknowledges  that the  record
                             

supports an award  of $85,894 in damages for a number of specific

                    
                              

     9 It is worth noting that most of the cases cited by the
RCAB and the Institute highlighting the extremely deferential
standard for reviewing damage awards involve awards for
intangible injuries, a matter "`peculiarly within a jury's ken,'"
Velazquez v. Figueroa-Gomez, 996 F.2d 425, 428 (1st Cir. 1993)
                                     
(quoting Wagenmann v. Adams, 829 F.2d 196, 215 (1st Cir. 1987)). 
                                     
See, e.g., Anthony v. G.M.D. Airline Servs., Inc., 17 F.3d 490,
                                                           
494 (1st Cir. 1994) (remand for remittitur; pain and suffering
damages excessive); De Leon Lopez v. Corporacion Insular de
                                                                     
Seguros, 931 F.2d 116, 125 (1st Cir. 1991) (damages to
                 
grandfather stemming from switch of twins by hospital); Brown v.
                                                                       
Freedman Baking Co., 810 F.2d 6, 11 (1st Cir. 1987) (review of
                             
damages for civil rights violation).  In such cases, 

     [w]e accord broad discretion to the trial court's
     decision to affirm the jury's award of damages because
     of [the] court's greater familiarity with local
     community standards and with the witnesses' demeanor at
     the trial.

Nydam v. Lennerton, 948 F.2d 808, 810 (1st Cir. 1991) (citations
                            
omitted) (suit involving, inter alia, police misconduct and false
                                              
arrest).  Although we do not lightly reverse an award for
economic loss, the inquiry in such a case is much more closely
focused on whether there is adequate evidentiary support for the
amount awarded.  See Havinga v. Crowley Towing and Transp. Co.,
                                                                        
24 F.3d 1480, 1489 (1st Cir. 1994); Redgrave v. Boston Symphony
                                                                         
Orchestra, Inc., 855 F.2d 888, 896 (1st Cir. 1988).
                         

                               -9-


problems at Catholic Memorial High School,10 but contends that no

other  figures were  provided to  explain the  additional $52,106

awarded by the jury.  Our review turned up three additional items

for  which the  jury  properly could  have awarded  compensation:

replacing gymnasium  light frames, repairing a  broken piano leg,

and replacing  paneling in two  rooms.  The  piano leg  and light

frames were the  subject of  testimony by Rev.  Sheehan, and  the

need for repaneling was noted in  Exhibit 58, to which the jury's

attention was directed.11

     One more aspect of  the Institute's harm warrants attention.

Air  Safety  concedes  responsibility  for the  $12,770  cost  of

repairing  the  gymnasium  floor  at Catholic  Memorial.    Kevin

Murphy, whose company  did the floor  repair, testified that  the

process  of  sanding  removes   wood,  and  the  gymnasium  floor

therefore  was, to  some  degree, in  worse  condition after  the

repair than before  the damage was done.  When  asked whether the

deficiency  would limit the use of  the floor in future years, he

responded that it would, "considerably down the road."

     We  believe  this  testimony  permitted the  jury  to  award

damages   for  the   premature  loss   of  use   of  the   floor.

                    
                              

     10 These are: $12,570 for gym floor repairs; $966 for
damaged books; $432 for damaged computer cables; $296 for damaged
phone wires; $1,630 for re-hanging curtains; $42,000 for wasted
salaries, and $28,000 for 14 weeks' lost bingo profits.

     11 Although the paneling was not the subject of specific
testimony, and, unlike other items, no invoice for it was
included in the record, see Exhibit 65, we think it reasonable
                                     
for the jury to conclude, on the basis of Exhibit 58, that this
was damage for which Air Safety was responsible.

                               -10-


Unfortunately, no value  was placed  on either this  harm or  the

three items of  damage listed above.   Without question, however,

the  approximately  $50,000 questioned  by  appellant  is far  in

excess  of the appropriate amount.   The evidence  was that a new

floor would have cost $50,000 to $60,000; from that knowledge, we

are  confident that  compensation  for reducing  the old  floor's

lifespan "considerably down the road" could not reasonably amount

to more than  several thousand dollars.  The other  items, all of

which appear to be  relatively minor, might generously add  up to

$5,000.

     Because our task is  to view the evidence in the  light most

favorable to the defendants,  see Velazquez, 996 F.2d at  428, we
                                                     

conclude  that the record supports a maximum award of $95,000 for

all  damages  to  the  Institute.    Thus, unless  the  Institute

consents  to a remittitur of $43,000, Air Safety is entitled to a

partial new trial.

                  III.  Exclusion of Summaries12
                                                        

     Air Safety  sought to  introduce into  evidence a  number of

summary exhibits in support  of its claim for damages  or quantum

meruit relief.   Such exhibits  may be admissible  under Fed.  R.

Evid. 1006, which provides:

     The  contents  of voluminous  writings,  recordings, or
     photographs  which cannot  conveniently be  examined in
     court may be presented in the form of a chart, summary,
                    
                              

     12 Defendants' assertion that this issue was not preserved
for appeal is untenable.  See McLaurin v. Fischer, 768 F.2d 98,
                                                           
101 (1st Cir. 1985) ("[T]he law is well settled that an appeal
from a final judgment draws into question all prior non-final
rulings and orders.").

                               -11-


     or calculation.  The originals, or duplicates, shall be
     made available for examination  or copying, or both, by
     other parties at reasonable time  and place.  The court
     may order that they be produced in court.

At issue  in this case is  the requirement in Rule  1006 that the

materials  underlying   a  proposed  summary  exhibit   be  "made

available" to opposing parties.  After a two-hour, mid-trial voir

dire  hearing in which each of Air Safety's proposed exhibits was

considered individually, the court  excluded most of them because

the  documents from which the  summaries were drawn  had not been

seen  by the  defendants  and were  unavailable  at the  time  of

trial.13

     Air Safety asserts that  the court erred in  concluding that

the documents  were inadmissible  under Rule 1006.14   It  claims
                    
                              

     13 The supporting records at issue were those showing the
company's overhead costs, and were located in its home office in
Illinois.

     14 A portion of Air Safety's argument seems based on an
assumption that the district court improperly excluded the
summaries because they were not supported by evidence
independently established in the record.  Although the court at
one point indicated that it felt bound by the "already-in-
evidence" requirement because of language to that effect in a
First Circuit decision, United States v. Nivica, 887 F.2d 1110,
                                                         
1125-26 (1989), the court recognized that such an approach
conflicted with the language of Rule 1006 giving the court
discretion to order production in court of the documents
                    
underlying a summary.  In any event, its decision ultimately was
based on a determination that the underlying documents had not
been "made available" to the defendants, and it therefore did not
need to rule on whether a summary based on records that were
                                                                      
available nonetheless must be excluded because they were
unsupported in the record.
     We note, for the sake of clarity, that Air Safety is correct
that the evidence underlying Rule 1006 summaries need not be
admitted into evidence.  See, e.g., United States v. Bakker, 925
                                                                     
F.2d 728, 736-37 (4th Cir. 1991); 5 Jack B. Weinstein & Margaret
A. Berger, Weinstein's Evidence,   1006[02], 1006-9 (1995);
                                         
Michael H. Graham, Federal Practice and Procedure   7031, at 959
                                                           

                               -12-


that it  gave defendants  copies  of the  challenged exhibits  in

November 1992, and that  they never asked during  the year and  a

half  before trial  to  see the  underlying material.   Moreover,

defense counsel had signed  two pretrial memoranda without noting

any  problems with Air  Safety's proposed  exhibits.   Air Safety

points out that  the documents  at issue easily  could have  been

brought  to  Boston for  defendants'  review had  there  been any

indication  before the start  of trial that  defendants wanted to

see them.  Thus, Air Safety contends that the records  were "made

available"  within the meaning of  Rule 1006, and,  to the extent

that  they were  inaccessible at  trial, the  defendants were  to

blame.    In  Air  Safety's view,  defendants'  trial  objections

constituted an ambush and should have been dismissed as untimely.

     We cannot agree.   Although it appears that Air  Safety left

the overhead records in Illinois in the reasonable belief that no

one was interested in them, the record indicates that the company

fell  short of meeting its  responsibility under Rule  1006.  Air
                    
                              

(1992).  Indeed, such an interpretation of the rule would negate
its explicit grant of discretion to the trial judge to order the
                                          
underlying documents produced in court.
     Although in Nivica and a subsequent case relying on it,
                                 
United States v. Sawyer, 85 F.3d 713, 740 (1st Cir. 1996), we
                                 
stated that Rule 1006 summaries must be based upon "evidence
independently established in the record," the language in both
cases was dictum because the relevant evidence there had been
admitted.  The requirement of prior admission actually applies to
a different sort of summary: one used as a jury aid to summarize
complex or voluminous information already in the record.  See,
                                                                       
e.g., Bakker, 925 F.2d at 736-37; Weinstein's Evidence, at  
                                                                
1006[07], 1006-21.  In such cases, the summary is not itself
evidence, Bakker, 925 F.2d at 736; Weinstein's Evidence, at  
                                                                 
1006[07], 1006-21-23, and the court's concern is to ensure that
the jury is not misled or confused by selective emphasis,
Weinstein's Evidence, at   1006[07], 1006-21-22. 
                              

                               -13-


Safety  apparently  submitted  only  a skeletal  version  of  its

summary exhibits  in November  1992, perhaps  without designating

them as  summaries,15 and first provided  a comprehensive version

in  June 1994.  In  the interim, all  parties had signed pretrial

memoranda that Air  Safety took as a sign that  defendants saw no

problems  with its  exhibits.   Defendants, however,  intended no

such acquiesence and, once the nature of the damages exhibits was

clear to them, sought to examine the underlying documents.

     In concluding that  Air Safety  had failed to  lay a  proper

foundation for the summaries, the district court did not  dispute

that  the company  willingly would  have provided  the underlying

documents  --  if requested  -- at  any  time during  the lengthy

pretrial period.   The  court ruled,  however, that such  passive

availability did  not  meet Air  Safety's obligation.   Near  the

conclusion of the voir dire hearing, it summarized its ruling: 

          I  don't think that it  is enough to  say that the
     documents  have  been  available  or  could  have  been
     available  or  were   available  when  they  were   not
     identified as the  source for these summaries.  What is
     important in  the discovery  context is one  thing, but
     once  the discovery  comes down  to trial  and somebody
     prepares a  summary, it  seems  to me  that the  person
     providing  the summary  must say  now these  documents,
     this summary  is a  summary of the  following documents
     and here they are.
                    
                              

     15 Defendants claim that the exhibits provided in 1992,
described by Air Safety's counsel as "prototypes," contained
little information.  Indeed, the Institute's counsel described
them during the voir dire hearing as "blanks" that bore headings,
but no numbers and few subheadings.  Those preliminary documents
apparently are not in the appellate record.  The Institute's
counsel additionally asserts that the challenged exhibits were
identified as "summaries" for the first time at the final
pretrial conference on June 30; the next day, she sent a letter
requesting the underlying documents.

                               -14-


     We think this is a correct and sensible construction of Rule

1006's "made  available" requirement.   As the  court recognized,

Rule  1006 operates  independently  of the  discovery rules,  see
                                                                           

Weinstein's  Evidence   1006[04], at  1006-16, and the failure to
                               

request or obtain the documents during discovery  does not negate

a party's  "absolute right  to subsequent production  of material

under Rule 1006,  should that material  become incorporated in  a

chart,  summary, or calculation."  Id.; see also Square Liner 360
                                                                           

Degrees,  Inc.  v. Chisum,  691 F.2d  362,  376 (8th  Cir. 1982).
                                   

Common sense  dictates that  this guaranteed access,  designed to

give the opponent the ability to check the summary's accuracy and

prepare  for cross-examination,  see, e.g.,  Chisum, 691  F.2d at
                                                             

376-77; United States  v. Smyth,  556 F.2d 1179,  1183 (5th  Cir.
                                         

1977); Weinstein's Evidence    1006[04], at 1006-15, must include
                                     

unequivocal  notice of  the other  party's intent to  invoke Rule

1006.  It seemingly was the lack of such notice that gave rise to

the misunderstanding and confusion here. 

     Thus, to  satisfy the "made available"  requirement, a party

seeking  to use  a  summary under  Rule  1006 must  identify  its

exhibit as such, provide  a list or description of  the documents

supporting  the exhibit,  and state  when and  where they  may be

reviewed.16  Here,  Air Safety merely assumed that the defendants

were  uninterested  in reviewing  the  overhead  records that  it

believed were  the obvious -- though not explicitly identified --

                    
                              

     16 This assumes, of course, that the "when" and "where" are
reasonably convenient for the opposing party.

                               -15-


source   for   its  proposed   damage   summaries.     In   these

circumstances, the  district court committed no  reversible error

in  concluding  that  Air  Safety  had  not  satisfied the  "made

available" foundation requirement for admitting the exhibits.

     Moreover,  we  doubt that  the  exclusion  of this  material

significantly prejudiced Air Safety.   The district court allowed

Air Safety to use the exhibits as chalks, and they were relied on

heavily  during the testimony of its damages expert.  The expert,

Dennis Staats, testified to the specific amounts contained in the

summaries while the jury was able to peruse the chalks.  Although

the  district  court  repeatedly   reminded  the  jury  that  the

testimony -- not the summaries -- was the evidence, we think  the

jury  was more likely to have understood  this as a caution about

the  technicalities of litigation  than as a  suggestion that the

calculations  in the  chalks  were untrustworthy.   The  numbers,

after all,  also were contained  in the  testimony.  To  be sure,

exclusion  of the summaries  from the jury  room required greater

reliance  on memory.    Air Safety,  however,  makes no  specific

argument -- even  a speculative  one -- showing  how the  quantum

meruit figures might have  been more accurate had the  jurors had

access to the excluded exhibits during deliberations.

     We therefore affirm the court's judgment with respect to the

quantum meruit award.

                          IV. Conclusion
                                                  

     The district court's judgment on negligence  damages against

Air Safety is vacated, and  the case is remanded for a  new trial

                               -16-


on  that   issue  unless  defendants  agree   to  remittiturs  of

$201,278.50 for the RCAB  and $43,000 for the Institute.   Having

found  no error in the court's exclusion of Air Safety's proposed

damages summary exhibits,  we affirm the quantum meruit award for

Air Safety as determined by the jury.

     Affirmed  in part, vacated and remanded in part.  Each party
                                                                           

to bear its own costs.
                                

                               -17-