United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
Nos. 99-2221
00-1116
JACK SHEEK,
Plaintiff, Appellee,
v.
ASIA BADGER, INC.,
Defendant, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Reginald C. Lindsay, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Torruella, Chief Judge,
Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
William A. Zucker, with whom Risa G. Sorkin and Gadsby Hannah LLP,
were on brief, for appellant.
Dana A. Curhan, with whom Kenneth Levine, Ross Annenberg and
Annenberg and Levine, were on brief, for appellee.
December 29, 2000
-2-
TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. On March 9, 1994, plaintiff-appellee
Jack Sheek, while working as an employee of Mobil Oil Singapore Private
Ltd. ("Mobil") in Jurong, Singapore, slipped on a small pipe and
injured his shoulder. Sheek brought suit in United States district
court against defendant-appellant Asia Badger, Inc. ("Asia Badger"),
alleging that Asia Badger or one of its subcontractors performed
certain repiping work and negligently failed to correct a known
hazardous condition which proximately caused him serious injuries. A
jury found in favor of Sheek and awarded him $387,000. Asia Badger
appeals, arguing that the district court committed reversible error by:
(1) making erroneous evidentiary rulings; (2) giving the jury confusing
and misleading jury instructions; and (3) denying Asia Badger's post-
verdict motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and a new
trial.
For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the district court
on all issues.
I. BACKGROUND
The basic facts of the case may be summarized as follows.
A. The Project
In June 1992, Sheek went to Jurong, Singapore to work as an
operations specialist on a new aromatics plant under construction by
Mobil (the "Project"). Asia Badger, a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Badger Engineering, Inc., was the general contractor on the Project.
-3-
During the Project's early stages, Sheek worked during the day and was
responsible for walking through the plant and reporting on the work
being done by Asia Badger. Part of his report included operational
problems, or "punch list" items, that needed to be corrected. Sheek
referred these items, directly or through intermediaries, to Asia
Badger. In turn, Asia Badger or its subcontractors worked on the
identified problems.
In January 1994, Sheek became the night superintendent and
began working twelve-hour shifts from 6:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. Sheek
ran equipment, flushed pipes, and completed other start-up tasks in
order to prepare the plant for operation. Sheek also continued to
identify punch list items which were passed on to the day shift. These
items were addressed during the day, and Sheek checked the progress of
the work while on duty at night.
In mid-January or early February 1994, Mobil discovered that
four xylene splitter pumps were operating at excessively high
temperatures. Tests indicated that the piping was too small,
preventing cooling water from adequately circulating through the pumps.
Sheek received orders to take these pumps out of service so that work
could be performed on them during the day shift. The pumps required
two types of work. The first was maintenance work, such as the
replacement of seals and bearings damaged by the lack of coolant: this
involved unscrewing a flange, removing piping, replacing the parts, and
-4-
screwing the piping back together. The second type of work involved
repairing the actual design defect, i.e., cutting out the inadequate
cooling pipes and replacing them with larger diameter piping. Like
other punch list items, Sheek noted the work completed on the pumps
when he arrived on duty in the evening.
B. Sheek's Accident
When the facility entered its final stages of construction
in early 1994, Mobil gradually took control of sections of the plant as
they became operational and expanded its maintenance work in those
areas. Full mechanical acceptance of the plant by Mobil occurred on
March 1, 1994. One week later, on March 8, Mobil held a dedication
ceremony for the plant. In preparation, some areas of the plant were
shut down and cleaned.
Also on March 8, Sheek received instructions to take the last
of the four pumps, the "D" pump, out of service. On the evening of
March 9, Sheek observed that some of the piping in the D pump had been
changed to a larger diameter size. At 11:00 p.m. that same evening,
Mobil workers arrived with a large control valve which had been removed
during the day for maintenance. Sheek checked up on the workers
several times as they reinstalled the valve. At about 3:00 a.m. on
March 10, Sheek walked past the xylene splitter pumps on his way to
look at the valve once more, since the work was nearing completion. As
Sheek neared the D pump, he stepped on a piece of pipe, fell backwards,
-5-
threw his right arm behind him and grasped a drain line to break his
fall. As he got up, Sheek saw the pipe, removed it from the walkway
and continued with his shift.
-6-
C. Injury and Treatment
When Sheek awoke the next morning, he felt pain in his right
shoulder and could not raise his arm. On March 12, Sheek saw Dr. Jimmy
Darwulla, an orthopedic surgeon in Singapore. Dr. Darwulla determined
that Sheek had a partial tear in his right shoulder muscle and
prescribed medication and physical therapy. That same day, Sheek filed
an accident report with Mobil, identifying the pipe he slipped on as
the kind being replaced on the xylene splitter pumps. On March 18,
Sheek returned to his home in Texas to obtain a visa for a three-week
assignment with Mobil in Saudi Arabia, which had been arranged prior to
his accident. Although Dr. Darwulla had advised Sheek that he was not
fit to go on the assignment, Sheek left for Saudi Arabia shortly
thereafter.
After returning from his assignment in Saudi Arabia, Sheek
visited Dr. Reid, an orthopedic surgeon in Texas. Dr. Reid diagnosed
a complete tear in Sheek's rotator cuff and recommended surgery, which
was performed in June 1994. Sheek underwent a second surgery several
weeks later to remove bone spurs and scar tissue that was causing him
pain. Following the surgery, Sheek accepted a temporary assignment
with Mobil but was unable to obtain a full medical release and thus
return to work permanently. Sheek declined Mobil's offer to place him
on half pay and retired in 1995.
D. Trial
-7-
Sheek filed suit against Asia Badger in the district court
for the Eastern District of Texas on June 1, 1995. On September 5,
1996, the case was transferred to the District of Massachusetts.
During the nine-day trial, both parties presented conflicting testimony
concerning almost every fact in the case. For purposes of this appeal,
we will briefly highlight the evidence relating to three main issues:
(i) who replaced the piping work on the xylene splitter pumps; (ii)
whether Asia Badger exercised control over the persons who performed
the work; and (iii) whether Sheek's injuries were caused by the pipe on
which he slipped.
1. The Piping Replacement
Asia Badger's central defense was that it was not responsible
for the repiping work performed on the pumps. To support this
contention, Asia Badger presented the deposition testimony of Gary
Steinmetz, who worked as a mechanical engineer for Asia Badger during
the Project. According to Steinmetz, the problem with the xylene pumps
was a result of a manufacturing error. Specifically, in addition to
the inadequate piping, the coolers were grossly undersized and had to
be replaced with larger capacity coolers. The piping could not be
replaced until the coolers were replaced. Steinmetz testified that
Mobil was the only party with the proper equipment to change the
piping: Asia Badger did not work with galvanized schedule 40 pipe,
identified by Sheek as the type of pipe on which he slipped. The
-8-
deposition of Ch Tai, Mobil's venture manager for the Project,
supported Steinmetz's testimony by revealing that Mobil had received
and replaced both the cooler and piping system in August 1994.
Sheek did not dispute that Mobil changed the coolers and
piping in August. He added, however, that a different set of pipes
were also changed in March by Asia Badger. Sheek testified that in
addition to observing some replaced pipes on the evening of March 9, he
had seen a memorandum prepared by Asia Badger indicating that the pipes
would be replaced and the design drawings altered accordingly to
reflect the change. According to Sheek, moreover, the overheating of
the pumps was a result of a design problem. During the period Sheek
worked on the night shift, Mobil only performed maintenance work on the
xylene pumps. James Syar, a supervisor on the Project at the time of
Sheek's accident, also testified that while Mobil replaced seals on the
pumps, Asia Badger took responsibility for the pipe replacement
beginning in January or February 1994. Syar also witnessed the
accident and identified the pipe that Sheek fell on as the same type
being replaced on the xylene splitter pumps.
2. Control Over the Work Performed
Asia Badger also rejected the notion that it had control over
any persons who had allegedly completed the claimed work on the pumps
in March 1994. To this end, the testimony of Mark Henderson, a project
control manager, indicated that after full mechanical acceptance on
-9-
March 1, 1994, control and custody passed to Mobil. Any remaining work
was conducted by Mobil or by Asia Badger subcontractors under Mobil's
supervision. Gary Steinmetz also testified that by this time, all but
thirteen Asia Badger personnel had left the site.
Sheek, however, countered this theory by testifying that
during his day duty in late 1993, he observed Asia Badger workers --
identified by their hats bearing the company's logo -- directing work
being done on the plant. Although Sheek himself could not see the
actual work performed on the pumps once he assumed the role of night
superintendent, he stated that Asia Badger was responsible for all
punch list work that involved design defects. Finally, Sheek's closing
statement referred to the testimony of Gary Steinmetz, who had stated
that Asia Badger's pattern of work was the same both before and after
January 1994.
3. The Cause of Sheek's Injury
Asia Badger presented Dr. Kennedy, an orthopedic surgeon, to
render his expert opinion concerning Sheek's injury. Dr. Kennedy
examined Sheek on March 18, 1997 and April 22, 1999 and his two medical
reports were admitted as exhibits. During direct examination, he
testified that he had also reviewed the evaluation of Dr. Haig, an
orthopedic surgeon in Port Arthur, Texas, who had evaluated Sheek's
condition on October 26, 1995 as part of a disability rating for the
Texas workers' compensation system. Dr. Kennedy then read from a
-10-
portion of Dr. Haig's report which described Sheek's alleged activities
in Saudi Arabia, including that "he had to do a great deal of heavy
work, climbing, pushing, pulling, et cetera, for about 40 days." Dr.
Kennedy identified this report as the source of information about
Sheek's activities in Saudi Arabia.
On cross-examination, Dr. Kennedy offered the opinion that
the progression of Sheek's partial tear into a massive evulsion of the
rotator cuff could be explained by Sheek's work in Saudi Arabia. Upon
further questioning, Dr. Kennedy acknowledged that he had reviewed Dr.
Haig's report since preparing his own April 1999 report. At this
point, the court held a voir dire, during which Dr. Kennedy testified
that he had read Dr. Haig's report three weeks prior to trial. He also
indicated that his opinion concerning Sheek's worsening injury was
based, in part, on Dr. Haig's report.
E. Jury Instructions and Verdict
Both parties agreed that Singapore law governed the issues
of both direct and vicarious liability. With respect to the latter,
the district court instructed the jury as follows:
The contractor is also liable for the failure
of any of his subcontractors to use such
reasonable care if the contractor exercised
direct supervision and control over the manner in
which the subcontractor does this work. Thus, in
this case, to prevail, Mr. Sheek must first
establish that Asia Badger or one or more of its
employees was negligent or that there was
negligence on the part of an Asia Badger
-11-
contractor, and that Asia Badger exercised direct
supervision and control in the manner in which
this subcontractor performed his work.
With respect to the concept of Asia Badger's
direct control and supervision over the manner in
which the subcontractor performed the work
assigned to the subcontractor, I instruct you
that direct supervision and control in this
context means more than retention of general
[sic] Asia Badger to watch over the progress of
the work of the subcontractor. It means that
Asia Badger must have exercised direct control,
not only over what work was to be done, but the
actual performance of the subcontractor as well.
In addition, the special verdict form submitted to the jury contained
the following question concerning negligence: "Were employees or agents
of the defendant, Asia Badger, negligent in performing the work in the
area of the alleged incident?" The court denied Asia Badger's request
to modify both the instructions and the verdict form.
During its deliberations, the jury sent the court a note
asking, "Regarding Number 3 on the Verdict Form, is Mr. Sheek's
negligence restricted to the time of the accident or could it include
the subsequent recovery period?"1 The court answered the jury:
I have instructed you that you are to
determine whether in the first instance,
negligence on the part of employees or agents as
I described, as I defined agents, caused the
injury to Mr. Sheek, and if you determine that it
did, that is to say that negligence was the
proximate cause of injury to Mr. Sheek, then you
are to determine whether negligence on the part
of Mr. Sheek was a proximate cause of his injury.
1 Question Number 3 asked, "Was Jack Sheek negligent?"
-12-
The underlying question in the analysis is of
course what is the injury.
And depending on how you determine, what you
determine the nature of the injury to be that Mr.
Sheek has is how you answer that question. So my
answer to you in short will be, it depends. It
depends on what you say the injury is, whether
you consider the time -- the time of the accident
or you consider some later period.
After additional deliberation, the jury returned a verdict for Sheek in
the amount of $430,000, reduced by ten percent, or $43,000, based on
its finding that Sheek was also negligent. The court entered judgment
on September 8, 1999. On September 17, Asia Badger moved for judgment
notwithstanding the verdict and for new trial and remittitur. The
district court denied both motions, and this timely appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
Asia Badger challenges the jury's verdict on three grounds.
First, Asia Badger contends that various evidentiary rulings prejudiced
its case against appellee. Next, Asia Badger asserts that the district
court failed to properly instruct the jury on the requirements for
vicarious liability under Singapore law. Finally, Asia Badger
challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying the verdict. We
address each of these claimed errors in turn.
A. Evidentiary Issues
Asia Badger claims that the district court erred in excluding
critical portions of Asia Badger's expert testimony. Asia Badger also
-13-
contends that the court improperly allowed Sheek and Syar to offer
testimony about which they had no personal knowledge. We disagree.
1. Dr. Kennedy's Testimony
At trial, the district court excluded portions of testimony
from Asia Badger's medical expert, Dr. Kennedy, for failure to
supplement his medical report to include changes in his medical opinion
as required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(e)(1). The court noted that neither
of Dr. Kennedy's own reports linked the development of Sheek's massive
rotator cuff evulsion to his work in Saudi Arabia, and that
consequently, his opinion as to the cause of Sheek's injury was
inadmissable. We will reverse a trial court's decision to admit or
exclude expert testimony only when there is an abuse of discretion.
Coastal Fuels of Puerto Rico, Inc. v. Caribbean Petroleum Corp., 175
F.3d 18, 34 (1st Cir. 1999); Licciardi v. TIG Ins. Group, 140 F.3d 357,
362-63 (1st Cir. 1998).
Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 26(e)(1) requires a party to supplement
its disclosures "if the party learns that in some material respect the
information disclosed is incomplete or incorrect and if the additional
or corrective information has not otherwise been made known to the
other parties during the discovery process or in writing." As we have
noted previously, the supplement requirement helps a party avoid the
burden of responding to unexpected and last-minute changes in its
opponent's expert testimony. See Licciardi, 140 F.3d at 363. This, in
-14-
turn, promotes the broader purpose of discovery, which is "the
narrowing of issues and the elimination of surprise." Johnson v. H.K.
Webster, Inc., 775 F.2d 1, 7 (1st Cir. 1985) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
Asia Badger asserts that, as an initial matter, it did not
violate Rule 26 because Dr. Kennedy was originally scheduled to testify
after the close of appellee's case. Since by this time Dr. Haig's
report would have been introduced into evidence by appellee, Dr.
Kennedy would be qualified to testify based on the Haig report pursuant
to Fed. R. Evid. 703, which states that "[t]he facts or data in the
particular case upon which an expert bases an opinion or inference may
be those perceived by or made known to him at or before the hearing."
Fed. R. Evid. 703. According to Asia Badger, although Dr. Kennedy had
to testify earlier than planned due to scheduling conflicts, the same
result should ensue.
We are not persuaded by this evidentiary sleight of hand. It
seems clear that Rule 703, which outlines the permissible bases for
expert testimony, was not designed to thwart the goals of open and fair
discovery embraced by Rule 26. Here, Dr. Kennedy revealed during voir
dire that Dr. Haig's report -- written in 1995 -- was provided to him
by Asia Badger at least three weeks prior to trial. In addition, Asia
Badger itself introduced the report and questioned Dr. Kennedy on its
contents, suggesting that it was aware of his changed opinion. Thus,
-15-
even if appellee intended to introduce Dr. Haig's report before Dr.
Kennedy testified (which is itself uncertain), Asia Badger would not be
excused from its duty to abide by the rules of discovery and inform
appellee of the change in the expert's pretrial report. See Licciardi,
140 F.3d at 365 (defendant required to inform plaintiff of material
change in expert's opinion, even where plaintiff might have reason to
expect that it might change); see also Thibeault v. Square D Co., 960
F.2d 239, 244 (1st Cir. 1992) (emphasizing that this Court attempts "to
ensure that the spirit of open discovery embodied in Rule 26 is not
undermined either by evasion or dilatory tactics"). Furthermore,
appellant offered no explanation whatsoever for its failure to amend
Dr. Kennedy's reports to reflect his new opinion. There is thus ample
support in the record for the district court's conclusion that Asia
Badger stood in violation of Rule 26(e)(1), and we do not believe that
Rule 703 was intended to end-run this basic requirement of fair play.
When faced with a discovery violation, the district court
"possesses wide latitude in formulating the appropriate sanction."
Poulin v. Greer, 18 F.3d 979, 984 (1st Cir. 1994). Under the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, a party that fails to disclose information
under Rule 26(e)(1) "shall not . . . be permitted to use as evidence .
. . any witness or information not so disclosed." Fed. R. Civ. P.
37(c). Although the court originally ruled to exclude all of Dr.
Kennedy's testimony -- a sanction well within the district court's
-16-
scope of discretion -- the court ultimately decided to strike only
those portions of Dr. Kennedy's testimony based on the passage in Dr.
Haig's report describing Sheek's activities in Saudi Arabia. It is
true, as Asia Badger points out, that causality was an important issue
in this case. However, Dr. Haig's report itself remained in evidence,
and the jury was free to infer, as Asia Badger argued in its closing,
that Sheek's activities in Saudi Arabia contributed to his injury.
Given its minimal impact on appellant's case, the district court's
sanction was relatively lenient and we see no reason to disturb it.
-17-
2. Sheek and Syar's Testimony
Asia Badger challenges the admission of (1) Sheek's testimony
that the cooling water issue was a "design" problem rather than a
maintenance problem and that Asia Badger was responsible for the design
work; (2) Sheek's testimony regarding the purpose of the repiping work;
and (3) Sheek's rebuttal testimony that the work done in August of 1994
described by Ch Tai was not the same work done in March of that year.
Appellant also challenges Syar's deposition testimony that Asia Badger
handled the repiping work in March of 1994, arguing that Syar did not
personally observe the work being done. We review evidentiary issues
for abuse of discretion. Kelley v. Airborne Freight Corp., 140 F.3d
335, 345 (1st Cir. 1998).
Fed. R. Evid. 602 requires that a witness have "personal
knowledge" about the matter to which he testifies. Such knowledge can
include "inferences and opinions, so long as they are grounded in
personal observations and experience." United States v. Rodríguez, 162
F.3d 135, 144 (1st Cir. 1998) (quoting United States v. Neal, 36 F.3d
1190, 1206 (1st Cir. 1994)); see also Fed. R. Evid. 701. We believe
that the record supports the district court's conclusion that Sheek and
Syar met this threshold in each of their disputed statements.
First, as his testimony reveals, Sheek had been a Mobil
employee for twenty-eight years, beginning as an operator in a chemical
processing unit. He later worked as a controlman and then as a
-18-
production supervisor during the construction of new Mobil plants in
the United States and abroad. By the time he arrived in Singapore,
Sheek had completed two years of pre-engineering work in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, which involved reviewing drawings and providing input
into the design of the Project. During his day duty, Sheek was
personally responsible for relaying, directly or indirectly, all punch
list items to Asia Badger. Finally, Sheek also observed a memorandum
from Asia Badger outlining the modifications of the piping.2 Combined,
these factors provided a sufficient foundation for Sheek to identify
the cooling water issue as a design defect and to infer that Asia
Badger had performed the design work. Given his experience and
observations, moreover, Sheek was qualified to testify that the purpose
of the repiping was to increase the flow of the cooling water -- a fact
that appears uncontroverted by both parties.
Sheek's rebuttal testimony did not even require inference or
opinion, but was grounded in his personal observations alone.
According to the deposition testimony of Ch Tai, Mobil performed
modifications on the cooling water pipes that led to the xylene
splitter pumps in August 1994. This work allegedly took place in the
aromatics unit, an area that Sheek supervised for a period of three
months. Sheek countered that during one of his shifts in March 1994,
2 The district court properly admitted this testimony as an admission
by a party opponent. Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2).
-19-
he observed that the piping in the D pump had been changed to a larger
diameter size. Sheek therefore had the personal knowledge to not only
distinguish the work described by Tai (on the pipes leading to the
pumps) from that which he observed (within the pump itself), but also
to testify that they involved different locations within the aromatics
unit.
Finally, the court properly admitted James Syar's testimony
that Asia Badger performed the repiping work. Syar's deposition
testimony included the following colloquy:
Q: Okay. When you say December and April are you talking about
December '93 and April '94?
A: Yes.
Q: All right. You were on the night shift that whole time
period?
A: Yes.
Q: Okay. Now, the work being done on these cooling water
pipes, that was done during the daytime?
A: Most of them were done -- yeah, because we were limited to
what we could have done at night.
Q: Okay. So it's yes that they -- that they were?
A: Yes.
Q: Okay. So you couldn't have actually seen the work being
done, is that right?
A: On that particular pipe, no. I-piping, only if they were
there, worked over at night.
Q: And did they?
-20-
A: I was there for some of it. Now, for the main header, that
was done during the day. Most of the time what we dealt
with was just what connected to our pumps so....
Q: All right. Tell me -- tell me the dates when you actually
saw the work being done at night.
A: I can't. I can't do that.
Although appellant makes much of the court's initial impression that
the testimony was "unclear," the court subsequently concluded that
Syar's testimony indicated that some of the repiping work took place at
night, while he was working. In fact, Syar affirmatively responded
that some of the work took place in his presence. The fact that Syar
was unable to specify the dates on which he saw the work being done may
affect the weight, but not the admissibility, of his testimony. See
Neal, 36 F.3d at 1206. Viewing his statements as a whole, Syar
demonstrated sufficient personal knowledge to testify to the party
responsible for the repiping work on the xylene pumps.
In sum, we hold that the district court did not abuse its
discretion in admitting any of the testimony claimed as error by
appellant.
B. Jury Instructions
Asia Badger next contends that the district court provided
misleading and confusing instructions on the issue of vicarious
liability and then exacerbated that error through a poorly-worded
special verdict form. Once again, we cannot agree.
-21-
1. The Jury Charge
According to Asia Badger, the district court erred when it
refused its request to "enumerate and clarify the standard" for
vicarious liability.3 Because Asia Badger objected to the court's
3 Asia Badger's request included the following instruction:
1. The burden is on Mr. Sheek to prove by a preponderance of the
evidence that it was an Asia Badger employee, and not any other
person or entity, who failed to use reasonable care with regard
to the pipe which is alleged to have caused the plaintiff's
injury.
2. If you believe that another person or entity failed to use
reasonable care with regard to the pipe, including an Asia Badger
subcontractor, then Asia Badger is not liable unless Asia Badger
actually exercised direct detailed control over [the] manner of
the doing of the work of the person or entity or subcontractor who
failed to use reasonable care with regard to the pipe.
3. In this case, Asia Badger is only liable for the actions of one
of its subcontractors if an Asia Badger employee personally
supervised and directed the manner and details of the doing of the
work of that subcontractor.
4. Direct supervision and control is more than retention of the
general rights of watching over the progress of the work which the
subcontractor agreed to do. You must find that Mr. Sheek has
proved by a preponderance of the evidence that Asia Badger not
only determined the work to be done but that an Asia Badger
employee exercised direct control over the actual performance of
the work which caused the injury. This means that there must be
actual control and direction of the details of the manner in which
the subcontractor performed the allegedly negligent work.
5. For example, if an Asia Badger employee was at the location of the
subcontractor's work and personally directed the work of the
subcontractor's workers, including the details and manner in which
the work to be done, and the subcontractor's workers took
instructions from him, then Asia Badger would be liable for the
work. On the other hand, if no Asia Badger employee personally
directed the work of the subcontractor's workers, then Asia Badger
-22-
instructions before the jury retired, it met the requirements of Fed.
R. Civ. P. 51 and must be reviewed to see whether there was error and,
if so, whether it was harmless. Beatty v. Michael Bus. Mach. Corp.,
172 F.3d 117, 121 (1st Cir. 1999). To this end,
[t]he rules of decision are uncontroversial. "The
trial court's refusal to give a particular
instruction constitutes reversible error only if
the requested instruction was (1) correct as a
matter of substantive law, (2) not substantially
incorporated into the charge as rendered, and (3)
integral to an important point in the case."
Elliott v. S.D. Warren Co., 134 F.3d 1, 6 (1st
Cir. 1998) (quoting United States v. DeStefano,
59 F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir. 1995)). Similarly, the
giving of an instruction is reversible error only
if it (1) was misleading, unduly complicating, or
incorrect as a matter of law, and (2) adversely
affected the objecting party's substantial
rights. Levinsky's Inc. v. Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc., 127 F.3d 122, 135 (1st Cir. 1997).
Faigin v. Kelly, 184 F.3d 67, 86-87 (1st Cir. 1999). Using these
guidelines, we discern no error in the district court's instruction.
Asia Badger meets the first and third prongs of the test for
the court's refusal to accept its proffered instruction. Both parties
agree that Singapore law governs the issue of vicarious liability. For
is not liable. In addition, if Asia Badger directed the
subcontractor what work was to be done, but did not provide
detailed control over the manner of the doing of the work, then
Asia Badger is not liable.
6. Thus, if you find that Mr. Sheek has not shown by a preponderance
of the evidence that Asia Badger exercised direct control over the
manner in which the persons or entities performed the work that
caused Mr. Sheek's injury, then you must find in favor of Asia
Badger.
-23-
this issue, both Sheek and Asia Badger cite as authority Mohd bin Sapri
v. Soil-Build Private Ltd., 1996 SLR Lexis 324 (Sing. Ct. App. 1996),
which held that a party was not liable for the negligent act of its
subcontractor because the party did not control the work of the
subcontractors and was not involved in any substantial supervisory or
coordinating capacity. Id. at *29 ("[The party] had left the matter
entirely to is sub-contractors."). Distinguishing the facts in Soil-
Build from an English case where such liability was found to exist,
McArdle v. Andmac Roofing Co., 1 Eng. Rep. 583 (Eng. C.A. 1967), the
Singapore court highlighted two scenarios where a contractor may be
liable for the negligence of its subcontractors.4 Soil-Build, 1996 SLR
Lexis 61 at *28. First, the party may be liable where the working
conditions are inherently dangerous, thereby "requiring the exercise of
a significant degree of supervision and control over persons with whom
he has no contractual relationship." Id. Alternatively, the party may
owe a duty of care if "he [has] taken it upon himself to exercise a
degree of control and actively coordinate the [sub]contractors'
activities, given that the work environment itself involved inherent
risks or danger." Id.
4 It should be noted that the court was concerned with a party's
liability towards the employees of its subcontractor, rather than
towards third parties in general. See Soil-Build, 1996 SLR Lexis 61
at *28.
-24-
The record suggests that the parties and the court took the
second route for determining liability. To be sure, Sheek did not
argue that Asia Badger was required to exercise control over its
subcontractors or third parties due to the "inherent danger" of the
work and facilities, nor did Asia Badger defend on this theory.
Rather, the issue presented to the jury was whether Asia Badger did, in
practice, exercise control over the claimed repiping work, which would
lead to a duty of care to Sheek. On this point, Asia Badger's proposed
instruction was correct as a matter of substantive law: it required the
jury to find that an Asia Badger employee "personally supervised and
directed the manner and details of the doing of the work of that
subcontractor" in order to be liable for the negligence of its
subcontractor.5 It is unquestionable, moreover, that the issue of
vicarious liability was integral to an important point -- perhaps the
most important point -- of the case.
Nevertheless, the refusal to incorporate the exact wording
offered by the appellant will not constitute error unless the court
failed to substantially incorporate the offered theory in its
instruction. Elliott, 134 F.3d at 6. According to Asia Badger, the
court did not properly instruct the jury on the elements of vicarious
5 Asia Badger appears to have taken this statement of law from McArdle,
as articulated by the Singapore court. Soil-Build, 1996 SLR Lexis 61
at *17 ("[In McArdle, the party] personally directed the work of the
sub-contractors, including the details and manner in which the work was
to be done.")
-25-
liability, namely, that a party must have control over "the details and
the manner of the work to be done" by the subcontractor. However, we
can find no disparity between this concept and the court's charge to
the jury. The court explicitly noted that the jury was required to
find that Asia Badger exercised "direct control, not only over what
work was to be done, but the actual performance of work of the
subcontractor as well." This indicated to the jury that it was to
consider both the "details and the manner" of the work performed. When
the court has sufficiently conveyed a litigant's theory, that litigant
is not "entitled to dictate the turn of phrase the judge should use to
acquaint lay jurors with the applicable law." Id. We therefore uphold
the district court's refusal to give the instructions offered by Asia
Badger.
However, Asia Badger also claims that the given instruction,
though incorporating its theory of applicable law, nonetheless confused
and misled the jury. We find this contention without merit. If
anything, the court condensed the lengthy and somewhat repetitive
instruction offered by Asia Badger into concise and straightforward
language that would be more easily comprehended by the jury. See id.
at 7 (decision to give a general statement of law in order to avoid
potential confusion from proffered instruction by counsel lies
"uniquely within the trial judge's discretion"). As we noted above,
the court offered a correct statement of the law, and appellant has
-26-
failed to identify any misleading or unduly complicating aspect of the
given instruction. Since we find none, we hold that there was no error
in the jury charge rendered by the district court.
We also reject appellant's challenge to the adequacy of the
court's response to the jury's query. We acknowledge that jury
instructions given during the course of deliberations come "at a
particularly delicate juncture" and require the court to construct its
wording carefully. Testa v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 144 F.3d 173, 175
(1st Cir. 1998) (warning that "the court can err as easily by
overinclusiveness as by underinclusiveness"). However, we have also
noted that as long as the court correctly addresses the issue submitted
by the jury, it may amplify the instruction at its discretion. See
id. at 176. The court here, after reminding the jury that it first
needed to resolve the issue of negligence, proceeded to explain that
Mr. Sheek's negligence could include either the time of the accident or
"some later period," depending on the nature of the injury. While it
may be true that the court could have phrased its answer more simply,
we find no basis to conclude that the instruction was confusing,
misdirecting, or misleading. See Steckstor v. Hancock, 984 F.2d 274,
278 (8th Cir. 1993) (concluding that district court's reference to
insurance in answering jury's question concerning liability, though
"unfortunate," was not error). We presume that the jury followed the
court's instruction, United States v. González-Vázquez, 219 F.3d 37,
-27-
48 (1st Cir. 2000), and Asia Badger's disappointment that the award was
reduced by "only" ten percent for comparative negligence does little to
rebut this presumption.
2. Verdict Form
Asia Badger also objects to the wording of the verdict form,
which it argues conflated the issues of direct and vicarious liability.
A verdict form must be "reasonably capable of an interpretation that
would allow the jury to address all factual issues essential to
judgment." Johnson v. Teamsters Local 559, 102 F.3d 21, 28 (1st Cir.
1996) (quoting United States v. Real Property Located at 20832 Big Rock
Dr., 51 F.3d 1402, 1408 (9th Cir. 1995)). We examine the court's
instructions to the jury and the wording on the verdict form as a whole
to determine whether the issues were fairly presented to the jury. Id.
at 28.
As we have already discussed, the court clearly instructed
the jury on the requirements for vicarious liability. The court also
separately addressed Asia Badger's direct liability for its own
employees. Given this distinction, the jury could reasonably interpret
the phrase "employees or agents" included in Question 1 of the verdict
form to refer to employees or subcontractors and hence, the respective
theories of direct and vicarious liability. If "the general charge
adequately directs the jury to its duties in answering the questions
submitted to it there is no need to accompany the submission with
-28-
repetitive instruction." Id. (quoting Lawrence v. Gulf Oil Corp., 375
F.2d 427, 429 (3d Cir. 1967)). Since the jury was so directed, we hold
that the court was not required to ask separate questions concerning
direct and vicarious liability in the verdict form.
C. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Finally, Asia Badger maintains that the district court erred
in refusing its motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and
new trial, because the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to
sustain the jury's verdict. Specifically, Asia Badger contends that
Sheek failed to establish two crucial elements of his claim: that Asia
Badger or its subcontractors actually performed the repiping work in
March 1994 and that Asia Badger exercised control over any work so
performed. Our standard of review is de novo, viewing all facts and
inferences in the light most favorable to the verdict. Sinai v. New
England Tel. & Tel. Co., 3 F.3d 471, 472 (1st Cir. 1993).
First, Asia Badger contends that the evidence establishes,
"unequivocally," that Mobil did the repiping work. The facts and
inferences most favorable to Sheek, however, suggest otherwise. Sheek
testified that on March 8, 1994, he took the D pump out of service.
The next evening, he observed that some of the piping within the pump
had been changed to a larger diameter. A jury could reasonably infer,
despite Tai's testimony to the contrary, that some repiping work was
-29-
indeed performed on the pumps in March of 1994.6 With respect to the
March 1994 work, moreover, Sheek conceded that Mobil performed
maintenance work -- such as replacing the seals -- on the xylene pumps.
He noted, however, that in the course of this work, any piping that was
removed would necessarily have to be reconnected. Based on this
testimony, a jury could reasonably believe that the pipe on which Sheek
slipped could not be related to the work done by Mobil. Finally, Asia
Badger's performance of some punch list work,7 Sheek's observation of
a memorandum from Asia Badger outlining repiping work to be done in the
field, and the fact that some work on the pumps was performed at night
by Asia Badger in Syar's presence all provide a sufficient foundation
6 In fact, a jury need not even disbelieve Tai to arrive at this
conclusion: since Sheek identified the August 1994 work described by
Tai as "further downstream" from the work he himself observed, the
conclusion that someone changed the piping within the pumps in March
1994 is not inconsistent with Mobil's replacement of the piping leading
from the pumps to the main headers in August 1994. Similarly, refuting
appellant's claim that Asia Badger did not "use" schedule 40 pipe is
not a sine qua non of Sheek's case, as appellant would have us believe.
On the contrary, Sheek identified schedule 40 pipe as the type being
removed from within the pumps. It is entirely possible, then, that
Asia Badger, while not utilizing this type of pipe in its own work,
nevertheless removed this type of piping from a pump manufactured by
someone else.
7 Steinmetz testified that both Mobil and Asia Badger took
responsibility for punch list work after January 1994. Although Asia
Badger claims that there is no evidence that the repiping formed part
of the punch list work, Sheek's definition of a "punch list" as an
"operational problem" supports the inference that the pumps' piping
problem would be included on this list.
-30-
for the conclusion that work done on the pumps in March 1994 was done
by Asia Badger or one of its subcontractors.
We also believe that there was sufficient evidence for the
jury to find that any work performed was done under the supervision of
Asia Badger. Asia Badger emphasizes that no one witnessed Asia Badger
exercise control over a subcontractor after January 1994. However,
Sheek testified that during his day duties in late 1993, he saw Asia
Badger employees actually directing work done by its subcontractors.
Steinmetz further testified that Asia Badger's work continued in the
same manner before and after January 1994. Taken together, these two
pieces of evidence could, as the district court noted, support the
inference that Asia Badger controlled the work done by its
subcontractors in the period from January to March of 1994 in the same
way that Sheek described this control before January 1994.
Although Asia Badger presents numerous inconsistencies and
alternative theories based on the facts, we do "not consider the
credibility of witnesses, resolve conflicts in testimony, or evaluate
the weight of the evidence." Hendricks & Assoc., Inc. v. Daewoo Corp.,
923 F.2d 209, 214 (1st Cir. 1991) (quoting Wagenmann v. Adams, 829 F.2d
196, 200 (1st Cir. 1987)). Rather, we will uphold the jury's verdict
unless the evidence points "to one conclusion and one conclusion only:
that the losing party was entitled to win." Sinai, 3 F.3d at 473.
Without a doubt, the facts here are myriad and conflicting. Wading
-31-
through this morass, however, we believe there is enough evidence to
support the jury's verdict in favor of Sheek.
III. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in all
respects.
-32-