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Gil De Rebollo v. Miami Heat Associations, Inc.

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1998-03-06
Citations: 137 F.3d 56
Copy Citations
18 Citing Cases

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 97-1361

                      YVONNE GIL-DE-REBOLLO,

                      Plaintiff - Appellant,

                                v.

            THE MIAMI HEAT ASSOCIATIONS, INC., ET AL.,

                     Defendants - Appellees.

                                           

Nos. 97-1622
     97-1830

                      YVONNE GIL-DE-REBOLLO,

                      Plaintiff - Appellee,

                                v.

            THE MIAMI HEAT ASSOCIATIONS, INC., ET AL.,

                     Defendants - Appellants.

                                           

          APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

          [Hon. Jos  Antonio Fust , U.S. District Judge]
                                                                 

                                           

                              Before

                      Lynch, Circuit Judge,
                                                    

                    Cyr, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                       

               and DiClerico, Jr.,* District Judge.
                                                            

                    
                              

*  Of the District of New Hampshire, sitting by designation.


                                           

     Kevin G. Little, Jr., with  whom David Efr n and Law Offices
                                                                           
David Efr n were on brief for appellant.
                     
     Ricardo  F. Casellas, with whom  Rodr guez & Casellas was on
                                                                    
brief for appellees.

                                           

                          March 5, 1998
                                           

                               -2-


          DICLERICO,  District Judge.   The  plaintiff-appellant,
                    DICLERICO,  District Judge.
                                              

Yvonne Gil Bonar  de Rebollo, was injured  by defendant-appellee,

Wes Lockard, who  portrays "Burnie," the mascot  of co-defendant-

appellee, Miami Heat Limited Partnership.1  The plaintiff brought

a tort action  seeking damages.   In  the first  trial, the  jury

awarded the plaintiff $10,000 but  the trial court found that the

verdict was most likely  the result of bias or compromise and set

it aside.  After a  second trial, the jury awarded the  plaintiff

$50,000.  The  district court also  awarded the defendants  costs

which they incurred after an offer  of judgment had been made and

awarded costs  to the plaintiff  as a prevailing party.   In this

appeal, the plaintiff  contends that she should have been granted

a third trial because the  $50,000 damage award was  insufficient

and  the trial  judge  improperly excluded  evidence.   In  their

cross-appeal,  the defendants contend that (1) the district court

erred in granting  a second trial;  (2) given  the fact that  the

plaintiff ultimately received less than the amount the defendants

had  proposed in  an  offer  of judgment,  they  are entitled  to

attorney's fees incurred after the offer; and (3) the trial court

should not  have awarded the  plaintiff costs  incurred after  an

offer   of  judgment.    We   agree  with  the  district  court's

                    
                              

1  Florida Basketball Associates, Inc. is also a defendant to the
action.  The record does  not make clear the relationship between
defendant Miami  Heat Limited  Partnership and  defendant Florida
Basketball   Associates,   Inc.,  but   the   parties  have   not
distinguished  between  them  on appeal.    Therefore,  the court
refers   to  the  Miami  Heat  Limited  Partnership  and  Florida
Basketball Associates,  Inc.  throughout the  remainder  of  this
opinion collectively as "the Heat."

                               -3-


disposition of the case in all respects with the exception of its

ruling awarding costs to the plaintiff incurred after an offer of

judgment.  Therefore, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

                Factual and Procedural Background2
                          Factual and Procedural Background
                                                           

          On   October  21,  1994,   the  plaintiff  attended  an

exhibition basketball game between the Miami Heat and the Atlanta

Hawks at the Roberto  Clemente Coliseum.  She  was seated in  the

front  row as  part of  a group  that had  received complementary

tickets to  the game.   She had attended another  exhibition game

under similar circumstances the prior year.

          During  a  time-out,  defendant  Lockard,  dressed   as

Burnie, approached  the plaintiff and  grabbed her hand.   He had

selected her at random to participate  in a routine he planned to

perform as  entertainment during the time-out.  When he attempted

to pull her onto the floor, she  resisted and loudly told him no.

He persisted, however, grabbing her  left arm with both hands and

pulling, because in his experience people often were reluctant at

first  but  later changed  their  minds.   Unbeknownst  to either

party, the  plaintiff's purse strap  had fallen over the  back of

her seat  and was  providing additional  resistance to  Lockard's

efforts.  He pulled the  plaintiff with such force, however, that

her purse strap broke and as a result she surged forward, falling

to the  floor.  Lockard took the plaintiff's sudden movement as a

                    
                              

2   Because the plaintiff  has challenged the sufficiency  of the
damages awarded by the second  jury, the court recounts the facts
relevant to damages  in the light most favorable  to the verdict.
See Molloy v. Blanchard, 115 F.3d 86, 88 (1st Cir. 1997).
                                 

                               -4-


sign  that  she had  changed  her  mind about  participating  and

dragged her by the  arm to the center of the court.   When he saw

that the plaintiff still did not wish to participate, he  did not

further coerce her.   She stood up, composed  herself, and walked

off  the  court  while  he  completed the  routine  alone.    The

plaintiff was extremely  upset by the incident and  left the game

prior  to  its  conclusion.   She  felt  as though  she  had been

humiliated in front of the entire crowd.

          The plaintiff suffered both  physically and emotionally

as a result of  the incident.  She felt pain in  her left arm and

shoulder as well as pain to a lesser extent  throughout her body.

She also  suffered a  bruise on  her left  thigh.   She did  not,

however,  break  any  bones or  suffer  any  neurological damage.

After arriving  at home, the  plaintiff took pain  medication and

applied ointment to her body.  A few days later, she consulted an

orthopedist and  a physiatrist  in connection  with her  physical

injuries.     She  undertook  physical  therapy  which  had  been

prescribed   for  her.    Surgery  was  neither  recommended  nor

undertaken.

          The plaintiff  has been  diagnosed with  post-traumatic

tendonitis in her left shoulder,  the primary symptom of which is

pain.   She  continues  to experience  pain in  her left  arm and

shoulder,   which  affects  her  when  she  engages  in  everyday

activities.  The  plaintiff takes  pain medication  on a  regular

basis, and her condition is not expected to improve further.  The

plaintiff's condition has required her  to modify her behavior in

                               -5-


order  to avoid  tasks and  activities that  will exacerbate  the

pain,   particularly  heavy   lifting   and  certain   repetitive

movements.  However, she has a pre-existing condition in her back

that  also  periodically  causes  her  pain  for  which  she  had

previously sought treatment.  This pre-existing condition imposed

similar restrictions on her ability to perform certain activities

such as lifting heavy objects.

          The  plaintiff consulted  with a  psychiatrist  for her

emotional  distress.    She  feels  that  the  event  has  had  a

profoundly  negative effect  on her  mental  and emotional  well-

being,   which  she  attributes   in  part  to   her  traditional

conservative  upbringing.  The  plaintiff avoids large gatherings

and feels that  her privacy and dignity have been  injured by the

incident.   She now takes  anti-anxiety medications on  a regular

basis.    The  defendants' expert  testified  that  the emotional

difficulties experienced by the plaintiff were not permanent, but

instead  represented a normal  reaction to an  adverse situation.

Experts for  both parties  agree that  the plaintiff's  condition

does  not  rise  to  the  level  of  a  recognized  psychological

disorder.   In addition to  the distress caused by  the incident,

the  plaintiff  had pre-existing  emotional  stressors, including

marital difficulty, that could account for some of her dysphoria.

          Subsequent  to  the  incident,  the  plaintiff  brought

criminal charges against Lockard.   She felt the need to confront

the people  who she  felt  had wronged  her.   Lockard was  found

guilty of misdemeanor  battery.  The plaintiff  also brought this

                               -6-


civil  action  against  both  Lockard  and  the  Heat,  Lockard's

employer.   Her claim, brought pursuant  to the court's diversity

jurisdiction, alleged that Lockard had negligently injured her in

violation  of Puerto  Rico law  and that  the Heat,  as Lockard's

employer, was responsible for that injury.

          Prior to the  civil trial, the  trial court ruled  that

evidence   of  Lockard's  criminal  conviction  would  be  unduly

prejudicial and precluded the plaintiff  from introducing it.  On

October  30, 1996,  the plaintiff's  case went  to trial  for the

first  time.   After  approximately  one  and one-half  hours  of

deliberation, the  jury  returned  a  verdict in  the  amount  of

$100,000 in  favor of the plaintiff,  but it found  only the Heat

liable and  not Lockard.   The trial  judge rejected  the verdict

because  the plaintiff  had pursued  only a theory  of respondeat

superior liability against the Heat,  and thus the Heat could not

have been found  liable unless Lockard was  liable as well.   The

judge  reinstructed  the  jury  on the  issue  of  liability  and

directed it to continue deliberating.

          After another hour,  the jury sent a note  to the court

requesting  guidance  on  the  amount  of  damages  to which  the

plaintiff was entitled.   The trial judge instructed  the jury to

review  the instruction on  damages the court  had already given.

The  jury deliberated  for approximately  another  hour and  then

returned a  verdict that held  both Lockard and the  Heat liable.

However, the jury awarded the plaintiff only $10,000 in damages.

                               -7-


          The plaintiff  filed a motion  for a new trial  and for

relief from judgment on November 14, 1996.  On December 16, 1996,

the  district  court ruled  that  the  jury's  verdict  was  most

probably an impermissible verdict based on compromise or bias and

granted a  new trial.   See  Gil de  Rebollo v.  Miami Heat  Ltd.
                                                                           

Partnership, 949  F. Supp.  62, 64-65 (D.P.R.  1996).   The trial
                     

court  reasoned  that three  possibilities  explained the  jury's

reduction  of the  damage award  to one-tenth  the figure  it had

selected  initially:     (1)   the  jury   may  have   rationally

reconsidered its  decision on  damages when it  was sent  back to

deliberate  further;  (2)  the  jury  may  have  thought  Lockard

unaccountable for his  interaction with the plaintiff  but wanted

to compensate her anyway from the corporate deep pocket, and when

confronted with the requirements of respondeat superior, the jury

lowered the amount of damages  which Lockard might be required to

pay, reflecting an improper compromise;  or (3) the jury may have

thought  that the  plaintiff had  suffered  $100,000 damages  but

tried to shield Lockard from having to pay because of an improper

bias in  his  favor, and  when it  realized it  could not  shield

Lockard,  it  lowered the  amount  of  the  verdict so  that  his

liability would be  minimized.  See id.  at 64.  The  court found
                                                 

that the latter two alternatives, both improper, were more likely

than the first, which was proper,  and granted a new trial.   See
                                                                           

id. at 65.
             

          The  second trial commenced  on February 10,  1997.  On

February 14, 1997, the jury returned  a verdict for the plaintiff

                               -8-


in the  amount of $50,000, finding that both Lockard and the Heat

were liable.  The plaintiff again filed a motion for a new trial,

asserting that the damages were insufficient, but the trial court

denied the motion.

          During the course  of the litigation, the  parties made

several attempts  to settle their  dispute without a trial.   The

plaintiff's initial  demand in the  case was for $1,000,000.   On

October 7, 1996, the defendants  made a written offer of judgment

under  Federal Rule  of Civil  Procedure 68  ("Rule 68")  to have

judgment  entered against  them in  the amount  of $80,000.   The

plaintiff  rejected the  offer  and countered  with  a demand  of

$600,000  and a  public apology.   The  defendants  rejected this

proposal and the first trial began on October 30, 1996.

          After the  first trial,  the defendants  made a  second

offer of judgment  on January 14, 1997, in the amount of $70,000.

The plaintiff rejected  the offer and countered with  a demand of

$250,000, which  the defendants rejected.   On January  23, 1997,

the defendants made a  third offer of judgment  in the amount  of

$100,000.   The  plaintiff also  rejected  that offer,  demanding

$180,000.  The  $50,000 verdict obtained by the  plaintiff in the

second trial was less than all three offers of judgment.

          After  the second trial, the district court awarded the

defendants  $8,271.71 for  costs  incurred  after  the  offer  of

judgment pursuant to Rule 68.   It denied the defendants' request

for attorney's  fees under  Puerto Rico Rule  of Civil  Procedure

44.1 ("Rule 44.1"), finding that  the plaintiff had not conducted

                               -9-


her case with temerity.  The court awarded the plaintiff costs as

a prevailing  party under Federal  Rule of Civil Procedure  54 in

the amount of $7,894.84.

          At  the  conclusion   of  this  legal  imbroglio,   the

plaintiff filed  a timely  appeal.   The  defendants have  raised

several issues on cross-appeal.

                            Discussion
                                      Discussion
                                                

          The parties raise the following  issues on appeal:  (1)

the defendants  claim that the trial court  abused its discretion

by  setting aside  the $10,000  verdict  in the  first trial  and

granting a new  trial; (2) the plaintiff asserts  that the jury's

verdict  of $50,000 damages in  the second trial was insufficient

and the trial court therefore abused its discretion by failing to

grant her motion for a third trial; (3) the plaintiff claims that

the  trial  court  impermissibly excluded  evidence  of Lockard's

criminal misdemeanor  conviction; and  (4) the  defendants assert

that the  trial court  erred in  its award  of costs  and in  its

failure  to award  attorney's  fees.    We discuss  these  claims

seriatim.
                  

          I.  Grant of the Second Trial
                                                 

          The  trial court granted  the plaintiff's motion  for a

second trial  after it  found that the  jury possibly  could have

properly reconsidered  the amount of  damages to be  awarded, but

more likely  had acted  for an improper  reason.   The defendants

argue that  the  trial court  should  have accepted  the  $10,000

verdict and  erred by granting  the plaintiff's motion for  a new

                               -10-


trial.   The  court, they  urge,  should not  have endeavored  to

choose among the  possible explanations for the  jury's behavior.

As  long as  there was  a  plausible explanation  for the  jury's

conduct that was  permissible, the defendants contend,  the trial

court should not have granted a new trial.

          This  argument is unpersuasive.  See Phav v. Trueblood,
                                                                           

Inc., 915  F.2d 764,  766 (1st  Cir. 1990)  (denial of new  trial
              

reviewed  only  for abuse  of  discretion).   As  the  defendants

acknowledge, First Circuit precedent  distinguishes between cases

where a jury's verdict is challenged  as improper based only on a

damage  award that allegedly fails to  bear any rational relation

to the  evidence of  the damages presented  at trial,  see, e.g.,
                                                                          

Correa v. Hospital San Francisco, 69 F.3d 1184, 1197-98 (1st Cir.
                                          

1995) (verdict  alleged to  be excessive),  cert. denied,  116 S.
                                                                  

Ct. 1423 (1996); Milone  v. Moceri Family, Inc., 847  F.2d 35, 37
                                                         

(1st Cir. 1988)  (verdict alleged to be insufficient),  and cases

where  there is  some evidence  of an  improper verdict  based on

factors other  than the  amount of the  damage award,  see, e.g.,
                                                                          

Skinner v. Total Petroleum, Inc.,  859 F.2d 1439, 1446 (10th Cir.
                                          

1988), cited with approval  in Phav, 915 F.2d at  768; Mekdici ex
                                                                           

rel. Mekdici  v. Merrell  Nat'l Lab., 711  F.2d 1510,  1514 (11th
                                              

Cir. 1983) (same).   Where the allegation of  an improper verdict

is  based  solely  on  the   amount  of  the  damage  award,  the

circumstances under which  a trial court  may overturn a  verdict

are  more limited.   See,  e.g., CIGNA  Fire Underwriters  Co. v.
                                                                        

MacDonald &  Johnson, Inc.,  86 F.3d 1260,  1267 (1st  Cir. 1996)
                                    

                               -11-


(grant  of a  new  trial appropriate  where  damages were  easily

calculable and  damage award  exceeded maximum  value of  damages

claimed and did not take into account offset to damages); Torres-
                                                                           

Troche v.  Municipality of  Yauco, 873 F.2d  499, 501 &  n.6 (1st
                                           

Cir.  1989) (suggestion that allegedly low damage award indicated

compromise  verdict was speculation  not meeting heavy  burden of

showing entitlement to new trial).  However, where evidence of an

improper verdict exists other than  the amount of the jury award,

such as when a jury  answers special questions in an inconsistent

manner,  the trial  court's discretion  to grant  a new  trial is

broader.   In  such  cases the  court  can  consider all  of  the

circumstances  surrounding  the  jury's  verdict,  including  the

amount of  the damage  award, in determining  whether or  not the

jury reached an improper verdict.  See Phav, 915 F.2d at 768-69.3
                                                     

          The  defendants  acknowledge  the  distinction  between

cases  where the  only evidence  of  a compromise  verdict is  an

allegedly insufficient  damage award  and cases  where additional

evidence indicates a  compromise, but they  attempt to cast  this

case as falling into the  former rather than the latter category.

However, in  this case the  trial court's  determination did  not

turn solely on the amount of the verdict that the jury ultimately

returned.   Rather,  the ten-fold  reduction by  the jury  of its

initial  award of damages  and the circumstances  surrounding its
                    
                              

3    Prior First  Circuit  cases,  however,  do not  endorse  the
proposition  propounded  by  the  defendants that  an  inadequate
damage award is an indispensable element of a compromise verdict.
See Phav,  915 F.2d at  768-69 (inadequate damages  are potential
                  
evidence of compromise verdict, as are additional factors).

                               -12-


determination of Lockard's liability  provided the primary  basis

for  the trial court's determination that  the verdict as finally

returned was motivated  by compromise or  sympathy.  The  verdict

form ultimately  completed by the  jury was free of  any internal

inconsistency  because it  held Lockard  and the Heat  liable for

$10,000 damages suffered by the plaintiff.  However, the sequence

of events preceding  that verdict was properly considered  by the

trial court  as an indication  that the jury reached  the verdict

based on compromise or  bias.  See id. at 768  (odd chronology of
                                                

jury  deliberations one "telltale sign of a compromise verdict").

Therefore,  the trial  court had  more latitude  in this  case in

exercising its discretion  to overturn the jury's verdict than it

would have had in a case where the only basis  for the grant of a

new trial  was the alleged insufficiency of  a damage award.  See
                                                                           

Mekdici, 711 F.2d  at 1513, cited with approval in Phav, 915 F.2d
                                                                 

at 768.

          The  trial court determined that the sequence of events

leading up to the  jury's final verdict in  the first trial  most

likely   indicated  that  the   jury  had  reached   its  verdict

improperly.  The jury initially had assessed $100,000  in damages

against the Heat but  did not find Lockard liable.   A short time

after  being told to deliberate further and requesting additional

guidance the  jury determined that Lockard was liable but reduced

the amount of damages to $10,000.   Based on the jury's behavior,

it  was logical  for the trial  court to  conclude that  the jury

wanted to  give the  plaintiff something but  it did not  want to

                               -13-


hold Lockard personally liable for a $100,000 award.  There is no

indication  that the  trial  judge, who  observed the  trial, the

timing of the  questions, and the  results of the  deliberations,

abused  his discretion in  arriving at this  determination.4  See
                                                                           

Phav, 915 F.2d  at 766.   We  therefore decline  to overturn  the
              

trial court and to reinstate the initial $10,000 verdict.

          II.  Insufficiency of the Jury Verdict
                                                          

          The plaintiff's main  contention on appeal is  that the

trial court erred by failing to grant  her motion for a new trial

following  the second  verdict, on  the grounds  that the  damage

award  of  $50,000  is  insufficient.   As  noted  above,  it  is

comparatively more  difficult  to justify  overturning  a  jury's

verdict where the  only evidence that something has  gone awry is

an allegedly  insufficient damages award.   Indeed, the  jury "is

free to run the whole gamut  of euphonious notes -- to  harmonize

the verdict at the highest or lowest points for which there  is a

sound evidentiary predicate, or anywhere in between -- so long as

the end result does  not violate the conscience  of the court  or

strike such a  dissonant chord that justice would  be denied were

the judgment permitted to stand."   Milone, 847 F.2d at 37.   "At
                                                    

best,  plaintiff's  verdicts  in personal  injury  cases  are not

models  of  mathematical  exactitude.    Thus,  the fact  that  a

particular award  is a few dollars long or short would rarely (if

ever) translate into a manifest  miscarriage of justice."  Id. at
                                                                        

                    
                              

4    In  reaching  this  decision we  intend  no  comment  on the
sufficiency of the $10,000 damage award.

                               -14-


41 n.7.  We  view the evidence in the light most favorable to the

jury's verdict,  see Molloy  v. Blanchard, 115  F.3d 86,  88 (1st
                                                   

Cir. 1997), and will only overturn the jury's award and the trial

judge's  ensuing  refusal to  grant  a  new  trial for  abuse  of

discretion, see Correa, 69 F.3d at 1197.
                                

          The  record  demonstrates  that  most  of  the  damages

suffered by the plaintiff were intangible.  "An appellate court's

normal  disinclination to second-guess a jury's evaluation of the

proper amount of damages is magnified where, as here, the damages

entail a monetary  valuation of intangible losses,  and the trial

judge, having seen and heard the witnesses at first hand, accepts

the  jury's  appraisal."   Id.   Even  accepting  the plaintiff's
                                        

complaints uncritically, which the jury  was not required to  do,

her  primary claims  for damages  are that  (1) she  suffers from

pain; (2) the quality of her life has been reduced because of her

pain and because of the measures she must take to avoid pain; and

(3) her  dignity, self-image, and  sense of well-being  have been

adversely affected by the incident.

          In addition to the intangible nature of the plaintiff's

injuries, the  evidence in this  case permitted the jury  to find

that her injuries  were not as severe  as she claimed.   The jury

could also have found that  most of the plaintiff's physical pain

was caused not by the incident in question but by the plaintiff's

failure to  obey her doctor's  orders not to move  heavy objects,

which  orders were given in connection with her pre-existing back

injury.    The jury  was  free  to  disbelieve  as  much  of  the

                               -15-


plaintiff's expert and lay testimony as it wished.  In short, the

plaintiff has  provided no support  for the proposition  that the

jury's $50,000 verdict was so  far beyond the range of acceptable

verdicts, based  on  the evidence  presented  at trial,  that  it

constituted  a manifest  miscarriage of  justice.   The  district

court did not abuse  its discretion by  denying her motion for  a

new trial.

          III.  Failure to Admit Evidence of Lockard's Conviction
                                                                           

          The  trial  court  ruled  that  evidence  of  Lockard's

criminal  misdemeanor  conviction  was inadmissible  because  its

prejudicial effect substantially outweighed its probative  value.

See Fed.  R. Evid. 403.   The plaintiff asserts  that this ruling
             

was error.  We review the district court's determination that the

evidence  of Lockard's conviction  should have been  excluded for

abuse of discretion.   See Kowalski v.  Gagne, 914 F.2d  299, 306
                                                       

(1st Cir. 1990).

          The plaintiff places undue reliance on Kowalski, a case
                                                                   

which stands  for the  proposition  that the  district court  has

discretion  to admit evidence  such as this.   See  id.  However,
                                                                 

Kowalski  does not  support  the notion  that the  district court
                  

abused  its discretion  in this  case  by failing  to admit  this

evidence.  Indeed, as Kowalski makes clear,  the district court's
                                        

decision  that the  evidence was  substantially more  prejudicial

than probative was well within its discretion.  See id.
                                                                 

          Here,  the   jurors  were  presented   with  sufficient

evidence to gauge the seriousness  of Lockard's actions and their

                               -16-


effect  on the  plaintiff.  In  addition to the  testimony of the

plaintiff  and other  witnesses,  the episode  was recorded  by a

television camera and the tape was made available for the jury to

watch.   The parties  stipulated that Lockard  was portraying the

mascot Burnie  throughout the  incident.  The  jury did  not need

evidence of Lockard's criminal  conviction to assess his  role in

the  incident.  Under  the circumstances, admission  of Lockard's

criminal conviction would have allowed the jury to substitute the

judgment reached in the criminal proceeding for its own.

          Furthermore, even assuming  arguendo that the exclusion
                                                        

of the evidence was error, the error had no effect on the outcome

of the  case.  The only  issue on which  Lockard's conviction was

probative was  the  issue of  his liability  for the  plaintiff's

injury.   Both  juries found  Lockard liable for  the plaintiff's

injuries.   Lockard's  conviction had  relevance  neither to  the

issue of  the plaintiff's injuries  nor to the amount  of damages

necessary to compensate her for those injuries.

          The   plaintiff's   reliance   on   Kowalski  for   the
                                                                

proposition that a criminal conviction is, as a matter of course,

relevant to  the issue of  damages in an  ensuing civil trial  is

also misplaced.   Kowalski  dealt with  a Massachusetts  wrongful
                                    

death statute  which provides  that damages  should be  "assessed

with reference to  the degree of [the  defendant's] culpability."

914 F.2d at 306.  For  that reason, the defendant's conviction of

the crime of  second degree murder  was relevant to the  issue of

culpability,  and  thus the  issue  of  damages.   See  id.   The
                                                                     

                               -17-


plaintiff's cause of  action here was for negligence  and she was

entitled only  to compensatory damages.   For these  reasons, the

district court did  not abuse its discretion by  failing to admit

evidence  of Lockard's  conviction,  and  the  plaintiff  is  not

entitled to a new trial.

          IV.  The Award of  Costs & Failure to  Award Attorney's
                                                                           
               Fees
                             

          The trial court  awarded the defendants costs  incurred

after their  first offer  of judgment but  declined to  award the

defendants their  attorney's fees.   It found that  the plaintiff

had  not  been obstinate  at any  point in  the proceedings.   In

addition, it awarded  the plaintiff costs as a  prevailing party.

The  defendants contend  that  (1) the  district  court erred  by

failing to  award attorney's  fees  incurred after  the offer  of

judgment; (2) the  court erred in finding that  the plaintiff was

not obstinate  under Rule 44.1; and  (3) the court erred  when it

awarded  the  plaintiff  costs  incurred  after  their  offer  of

judgment.  We discuss these claims seriatim.
                                                     

A.  Attorney's Fees Incurred After the Offer of Judgment
                                                                  

          The trial  court declined the defendants'  request that

they  be awarded attorney's  fees that were  incurred after their

offer of judgment.  The defendants assert that it was error to do

so.  Resolution of this  issue requires that we carefully analyze

the  relationship between two  rules of civil  procedure, Federal

Rule  68 and  Puerto Rico  Rule  35.1, both  of which  ostensibly

govern the situation at hand.

                               -18-


          In  Erie Railroad  Co. v.  Tompkins,  the United  State
                                                       

Supreme Court  set forth the  general doctrine  by which  federal

courts in diversity  cases determine whether state or federal law

will apply to a controversy.   See 304 U.S. 64 (1938).   In Hanna
                                                                           

v. Plumer, the  Supreme Court set forth the  test for determining
                   

how a court should choose between a federal procedural rule and a

conflicting  state  substantive rule.    See  380  U.S. 460,  471
                                                      

(1965).  Where  a Federal Rule is "sufficiently  broad to control

the  issue" but conflicts with a state law, the court applies the

Federal  Rule unless  it  transgresses the  limits  of the  Rules

Enabling Act, 28 U.S.C.   2072, or the Constitution.  Id. at 471-
                                                                   

72; see  also Stewart Org., Inc. v. Ricoh Corp., 487 U.S. 22, 29-
                                                         

31 (1988).5   In most cases where a conflict  exists, the Federal
                    
                              

5   Since the Hanna decision, the Supreme Court has clarified the
                             
focus of the  inquiry for determining whether  a state law  and a
Federal Rule conflict.  Early cases indicated the necessity for a
"direct collision."  See, e.g.,  Walker v. Armco Steel Corp., 446
                                                                      
U.S.  740, 749-51  (1980); Hanna,  380 U.S.  at 472.   Subsequent
                                          
cases make clear,  however, that the "direct  collision" analysis
does not involve the narrowest  possible reading of the  relevant
Federal Rule.  See Stewart, 487 U.S.  at 26 n.4; Walker, 446 U.S.
                                                                 
at  751  &  n.9.    In Stewart,  the  Supreme  Court  stated  the
                                        
following:

            Our  cases at  times  have referred  to the
          question  at this stage of the analysis as an
          inquiry  into  whether  there  is  a  "direct
          collision"  between  state and  federal  law.
          Logic  indicates,  however,   and  a  careful
          reading  of the  relevant passages  confirms,
          that this  language is  not meant  to mandate
          that federal  law and state  law be perfectly
          coextensive  and  equally applicable  to  the
          issue at hand; rather, the "direct collision"
          language, at least where the applicability of
          a federal  statute is at issue, expresses the
          requirement  that  the   federal  statute  be
          sufficiently  broad  to  cover the  point  in

                               -19-


Rule will be applied because  the Federal Rules are presumptively

valid.  See Burlington N. R.R. v. Woods, 480 U.S. 1, 5 (1987); 17
                                                 

James Wm. Moore  et al., Moore's Federal Practice   124.03[1] (3d
                                                           

ed. 1997).

          Rule 35.1 of the  Puerto Rico Rules of Civil  Procedure

("Rule  35.1")  addresses offers  of judgment.   It  provides, in

pertinent part, as follows:

            At  least ten  (10) days  before  the trial
          begins, a party defending against a claim may
          serve  upon the  adverse  party  an offer  to
          allow judgment  to be taken  against him  for
          the  money  or  property  or  to  the  effect
          specified  in  his  offer,  with  costs  then
          accrued.  . . .   If  [the offer  is rejected
          and]  the judgment  finally  obtained by  the
          offeree is not more favorable than the offer,
          the offeree must pay  the costs, expenses and
          attorney's fees incurred  after the making of
          the offer. 

P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 32, App. III, Rule 35.1 (1983).   The Supreme

Court of  Puerto Rico has  held that  this rule applies  not only

when  the plaintiff/offeree  prevails  at  trial  and  attains  a

verdict that is less than the offer of judgment but also when the

plaintiff/offeree loses the suit in its entirety.  See Ganapolsky
                                                                           

v.  Keltron Corp.,  823 F.2d  700,  701 (1st  Cir. 1987)  (citing
                           

                    
                              

          dispute.   It  would make  no  sense for  the
          supremacy  of federal  law to  wane precisely
          because there  is  no state  law directly  on
          point.

487 U.S. at 26 n.4 (citations omitted).  Subsequent First Circuit
cases   confirm  that  the  relevant  inquiry  for  evaluating  a
potential conflict is  whether the Federal Rule  is "sufficiently
broad  to control the issue."   See Commercial  Union Ins. Co. v.
                                                                        
Walbrook Ins. Co.,  41 F.3d 764, 772  (1st Cir. 1994);  Daigle v.
                                                                        
Maine Med. Ctr., Inc., 14 F.3d 684, 689 (1st Cir. 1994).
                               

                               -20-


Hermandad Unida  de Carpinteros y Ebanistas de America v. V. & E.
                                                                           

Eng'g Constr. Co., 115 D.P.R. 711 (1984)).
                           

          Rule 68 provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

            At  any time more  than 10 days  before the
          trial  begins,  a party  defending  against a
          claim may  serve  upon the  adverse party  an
          offer to  allow judgment to be  taken against
          the defending party for the money or property
          or to the effect specified in the offer, with
          costs then accrued.  . . .  If [the  offer is
          rejected and]  the judgment  finally obtained
          by the offeree is not more favorable than the
          offer,  the   offeree  must  pay   the  costs
          incurred after the making of the offer.

Fed. R. Civ.  P. 68.  Rule 68 does not itself supply a definition

of  "costs."  Instead, it incorporates  the definition of "costs"

found in  the relevant  substantive statute  of the  jurisdiction

whose substantive law  applies to the case.   Therefore, when the

definition   of  "costs"  in  the  relevant  substantive  statute

includes  attorney's  fees,  attorney's fees  incurred  after the

offer of  judgment must  be paid by  the offeree.   See  Marek v.
                                                                        

Chesny, 473 U.S.  1, 9 (1985).  In addition, Rule 68 applies only
                

when a plaintiff/offeree  obtains an award that is  less than the

offer of judgment,  and not when the  plaintiff/offeree loses the

suit in its entirety.  See  Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. August,  450
                                                                     

U.S. 346, 352 (1981); Ganapolsky, 823 F.2d at 701-02.
                                          

          Rule  68  would  not allow  the  defendants  to recover

attorney's  fees in this  case unless the  underlying substantive

law defines attorney's fees  as a part of costs.   See Marek, 473
                                                                      

U.S. at 9.  The substantive law underlying this action  is Puerto

Rico's law of negligence.  See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31,   5141 ("A
                                        

                               -21-


person who by an act or omission causes damage to another through

fault  or negligence  shall be  obliged to  repair the  damage so

done.").  Puerto  Rico law makes  no provision for  the award  of

attorney's fees as  any part of "costs"  in such cases.   Compare
                                                                           

Rule 44.1(a)  ("Costs shall be  allowed to the  prevailing party,

except  when otherwise directed  by law or  by these rules.   The

costs  which may  be  allowed  by the  court  are those  expenses

necessarily  incurred in  prosecuting  an  action  or  proceeding

which, according to law or to the discretion of the court, one of

the parties should  reimburse to the other."),  with Rule 44.1(d)
                                                              

("In  the event any party or  its lawyer has acted obstinately or

frivolously, the  court shall,  in its  judgment, impose on  such

person the payment  of a sum for attorney's fees  which the court

decides corresponds to such conduct.").  

          The only other  source of  Puerto Rico  law that  might

supply a  definition of  costs that includes  attorney's fees  is

Rule 35.1 itself.6   However, Rule 35.1  allows for the award  of

"costs, expenses and  attorney's fees."  P.R. Laws  Ann. tit. 32,

App. III,  Rule 35.1 (1983).  On its  face, the rule treats costs

and  attorney's  fees  as  separate  items;  it  does not  define

attorney's  fees as  part of  costs.   See id.;  see also,  e.g.,
                                                                          

Knight v. Snap-On Tools Corp., 3 F.3d 1398, 1405 (10th Cir. 1993)
                                       
                    
                              

6   We  accept, arguendo,  the proposition  that the  Puerto Rico
                                  
Rules of Civil  Procedure may supply substantive  legal standards
in some  circumstances.   See Ganapolsky, 823  F.2d at  702 (Rule
                                                  
35.1); V lez v. Crown Life Ins. Co., 599 F.2d 471, 474  (1st Cir.
                                             
1979) (earlier  enactment of  current Rule  44.1); Pan Am.  World
                                                                           
Airways  v. Ramos,  357 F.2d  341, 342  (1st Cir.  1966) (earlier
                           
enactment of current Rule 44.1).

                               -22-


("[T]he fee-shifting provision clearly identifies attorney's fees

separately from  costs."); Oates v.  Oates, 866 F.2d  203, 206-07
                                                    

(6th Cir. 1989).  Therefore,  the "costs" to which the defendants

would be entitled under Rule 68  are those detailed in 28  U.S.C.

  1920, which do not include attorney's fees.

          Rule 35.1 and  Rule 68  both ostensibly  apply to  this

case and  would result in a different award.7   The two rules are

in  "direct  collision"  despite  the  fact  that  they  are  not

"perfectly coextensive" because Rule 68 is "sufficiently broad to

cover the point  in dispute."  See  Stewart, 487 U.S. at  26 n.4;
                                                     

Burlington, 480  U.S. at  4-5.  Compare  Aceves v.  Allstate Ins.
                                                                           

Co., 68 F.3d 1160, 1167-68  (9th Cir. 1995) (Rule 68  and federal
             

law on expert witness fee compensation controlled despite similar

California offer  of  judgment  law  and  conflicting  California

expert  witness  law), with  S.A. Healy  Co. v.  Milwaukee Metro.
                                                                           

Sewerage Dist., 60 F.3d 305, 310 (7th Cir. 1995) (Rule 68  not in
                        

direct  conflict   with  Wisconsin  statute   governing  rejected

settlement  offers  by  plaintiffs), and  Tanker  Mgm't,  Inc. v.
                                                                        

Brunson,  918 F.2d 1524,  1528 (11th Cir.  1990) (Rule  68 not in
                 

                    
                              

7  The defendants urge, based on our decision in Ganapolsky, that
                                                                     
the district  court should have  applied Rule 35.1 to  award them
attorney's fees.  See 823 F.2d at 702.   Ganapolsky, however, did
                                                             
not involve  an actual  conflict between Rule  68 and  Rule 35.1.
The  defendant in  Ganapolsky prevailed  because the  plaintiff's
                                       
case was dismissed  as a sanction.   See id. at 701.   Therefore,
                                                      
Rule 68  did not apply.   See Delta  Air Lines, 450  U.S. at 352;
                                                        
Ganapolsky,  823 F.2d at  701-02.  Rule 35.1,  on the other hand,
                    
did apply.  See id. at 701 (citing Hermandad).  This case differs
                                                      
from  Ganapolsky, because here  the plaintiff received  a verdict
                          
less favorable  than the defendants'  offer of judgment  and thus
Rule 68 applies.

                               -23-


"direct  collision"  with  Florida statute  governing  attorney's

fees, offers  of judgment, and  settlement offers).   The parties

have not suggested and the  court cannot discern any infirmity in

Rule 68  sufficient  to defeat  the presumption  of validity  and

constitutionality mandated  by Burlington Northern  Railroad, 480
                                                                      

U.S. at 5.  See  S.A. Healy Co., 60 F.3d at 312  ("[T]here cannot
                                         

be  any doubt  that Rule  68  is within  the scope  of  the Rules

Enabling  Act.").   Therefore, Rule  68, rather  than Rule  35.1,

applies  in this  case and  the defendants  are entitled  only to

costs.   The district court did not err  in refusing to award the

defendants their attorney's fees as part of costs.

B.  Obstinacy
                       

          The district  court found  that the  plaintiff was  not

obstinate under  Rule 44.1(d)  and declined  to award  attorney's

fees.8    A  finding  of  obstinacy  is  reviewed  for  abuse  of

discretion.  See De Le n L pez v. Corporaci n Insular de Seguros,
                                                                          

931 F.2d 116,  126-27 (1st Cir. 1991).   The defendants urge that

the  plaintiff's conduct  was obstinate  because  she refused  to

                    
                              

8  Rule 44.1(d) provides that:

            In  the event any  party or its  lawyer has
          acted obstinately  or frivolously,  the court
          shall, in its judgment, impose on such person
          the  payment  of a  sum  for attorney's  fees
          which the  court decides corresponds  to such
          conduct.

P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 32, App. III, Rule 44.1(d) (Supp. 1992).

                               -24-


accept  multiple  offers  of  judgment  which  they  assert  were

reasonable.9  The fact that the plaintiff was  eventually awarded

less than  the amount of  the offers, the defendants  contend, is

evidence  of their reasonableness.   The  defendants ask  that we

adopt a rule  that failure to accept  an offer of judgment,  when

the verdict at  trial turns  out to  be less than  the offer,  be

considered obstinate per se.  
                                     

          The  presumption  requested  by  the  defendants  lacks

support in Puerto  Rico law,  and we  decline to adopt  it.   The

district  court judge,  who  observed  the  proceedings  as  they

unfolded, made  a finding that  the plaintiff was  not obstinate.

Because  we find  no evidence  that  the trial  judge abused  his

discretion  in that  determination, we  decline  to overturn  the

district court on this issue.

C.  Plaintiff's Expert Fees Incurred After the Offer of Judgment
                                                                          

          The  defendants finally contend that the court erred by

awarding the  plaintiff expert fees  incurred after the  offer of

judgment.  Such an award  expressly contravenes the terms of Rule

68, which provides that, if an offer of  judgment is rejected and

"the  judgment  finally  obtained  by  the  offeree  is not  more

favorable than the offer, the offeree must pay the costs incurred

after  the making  of the  offer."   Fed.  R.  Civ. P.  68.   The

district  court  erred  in  making  this  award.    Although  the
                    
                              

9   The defendants argue  that the plaintiff was  obstinate under
the standards of either Rule 44.1 or Rule 35.1.  However, because
we  have determined that Rule  35.1 does not  apply in this case,
see section  IV.A supra,  we consider  here only  the defendants'
                                 
argument with respect to Rule 44.1.

                               -25-


plaintiff did  not distinguish  between costs  incurred pre-  and

post-offer,  the  defendants  have only  contested  the  award of

$3,950 paid  for the testimony of two  experts at the two trials.

Because  such amounts were  clearly incurred  after the  offer of

judgment  and  the  defendants  have  not  challenged  the  other

components of the trial court's initial award of costs, we reduce

the plaintiff's award of costs by that amount.

                            Conclusion
                                      Conclusion
                                                

          To conclude,  we find the parties'  remaining arguments

and claimed errors  to be without merit and  unworthy of extended

discussion.   For the reasons  stated above, the judgment  of the

district court is affirmed as  to the grant of the  second trial,
                            affirmed
                                    

the exclusion of evidence of Lockard's conviction, the refusal to

grant a third trial, and the refusal to grant attorney's  fees as

part of costs  incurred after the first  offer of judgment.   The

district court's award  to the plaintiff of costs  incurred after

the offer of judgment  in the amount  of $3,950 is reversed,  and
                                                             reversed
                                                                     

the plaintiff's award  of costs shall be reduced  by that amount.

Because the plaintiff's appeal was wholly without merit, costs of

the appeal are awarded to the defendants.

                               -26-