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Kittitas County Record Verdict: $800,000
The $800,000 wrongful death verdict
in Dosanjh v Bhatti raises several
interesting practice issues. Plaintiff
was killed on the job, yet evaded the
workman's compensation bar. Defendant,
killed in the same accident, was
plaintiff's employee. The case was tried
in Kittitas County where no prior
reported verdict exceeded $100,000.
Plaintiff was East Indian, and his
marriage to the chief beneficiary of the
estate was arranged. His economic losses
had to be based on an earnings history
averaging less than $10,000 (Canadian)
per year.
Twenty Challenges for Cause
Kittitas County has a well-deserved
reputation for an anti-plaintiff jury
pool. The largest reported personal
injury verdict was a 1992 verdict of
$100,000 for the death of a long haul
truck driver. So when Dean Brett entered
Kittitas County Superior Court
representing a long haul truck driver
who had the ill fortune of being killed
on Interstate 90 while traveling through
Ellensburg, especially representing an
East Indian widow who had been part of
an arranged marriage, he knew he had
jury selection problems.
The 39 potentials who showed up for jury
duty quickly expressed their feelings
that "money won't bring him back" and
"both drivers died so why should one
family take advantage and profit from
the other family" and "life is tough,
but the widow has to learn to survive on
her own". Realizing that the panel was
too conservative to re-educate, Brett
allowed the more vocal jurors to express
their ire at outlandish plaintiffs'
verdicts, allowed other jurors to agree
with the principles enunciated by the
vocal conservatives, and then induced 20
of the 39 jurors to agree with the
proposition that decedent's widow was
doing something "immoral" by bringing a
claim on behalf of herself and her
children for the negligently inflicted
death of her husband. Having thus
prejudged the case, all 20 potentials
were dismissed for cause, leaving the 19
who had expressed no such prejudicial
belief, even though given a clear
opportunity to do so, as a reduced and
more receptive jury pool.
The Workman's Compensation Bar
The initial challenge had been to get a
jury at all. Bhatti was employed by
Dosanjh as a co-driver in his long haul
trucking company. Bhatti negligently
drove off the road, rolled the truck and
killed both himself and Dosanjh.
Defendants raised the bar of the British
Columbia Worker's Compensation Act,
claiming that it prevented Dosanjh from
bringing suit against his co-worker.
Trial court judge Michael Cooper agreed,
granting summary judgment dismissal of
all plaintiffs' claims. The Court of
Appeals in Dosanjh v. Bhatti, 85
Wn. App. 769 (1997) reversed, holding
that under British Columbia's Worker's
Compensation Act, a worker killed by a
co-worker in a foreign jurisdiction can
elect to have the claim adjudicated
under the law of the foreign
jurisdiction in lieu of worker's
compensation benefits. The Supreme Court
refused to grant review, thus remanding
the case for trial.
Mediation Fails
Plaintiffs' counsel Dean Brett of Brett
& Coats and defense counsel Thomas J.
Collins of Merrick, Hofstedt & Lindsey
engaged the services of experienced
mediator David Thorner of Yakima's
Thorner, Gano & Kennedy. Unfortunately,
CIGNA of Canada appeared at the
mediation with a negotiator who was
unwilling to offer more than $25,000 for
this wrongful death claim. The low offer
closed all further negotiations and no
further offer was made prior to jury
verdict.
Summary Judgment on Liability
It was now plaintiffs' turn for summary
judgment. Plaintiffs moved for summary
judgment on liability arguing that
defendant had simply driven off the road
in this one-vehicle accident. Defendants
attempted to avoid summary judgment by
pointing to the Washington State Patrol
investigation showing that the truck had
a leaky muffler under the cab which may
have contributed to defendant's
drowsiness and the ultimate crash.
Defendants offered the testimony of King
County Medical Examiner Donald Reay M.D.
In a battle of experts, plaintiffs were
able to demonstrate through the
testimony of the Yakima County Medical
Examiner Jeff Reynolds M.D. and forensic
pathologist James A.J. Ferris M.D. that
the carbon monoxide content of diesel
fumes, unlike the carbon monoxide
content of gasoline funds, is
insufficient to cause drowsiness without
first inducing physiological effects
such as vomiting which would have warned
a driver of impending drowsiness. Judge
Cooper granted summary judgment on
liability, reserving the issue of
damages only for trial.
Loss of Consortium in an Arranged
Marriage
Plaintiff sought the classic emotional
losses for the decedent's widow. The
difficulty was that the marriage had
been arranged, in fact, Malkiat Dosanjh
was sent to Vancouver to marry Amar
Dosanjh by her parents, and she had not
met her husband-to-be until she walked
down the aisle. A straightforward
confrontation of the issue was found to
be the best approach. Numerous witnesses
described the tradition of arranged
marriages in Sikh culture, marriages
which work out at a statistically better
rate than America's so-called "love
marriages." In a trial highlight,
Malkiat Dosanjh then narrated a slide
show in the darkened courtroom showing
their growing family as through the
years she fell in love with her husband.
Her testimony, together with the
testimony of numerous members of the
Vancouver Sikh community, demonstrated
the deep and abiding love between the
parties. At the end of the trial, the
judge and jury both expressed
appreciation for their education about
the rich tradition of Sikh arranged
marriages.
Pain and Suffering in Anticipation of
Death
Damages were also sought for pain and
suffering in anticipation of death. When
the truck overturned and slid down
Interstate 90, it caught on fire. A
following driver ran up to the truck and
saw the driver inside, flailing and
shouting, "Help me, help me." Despite
her best efforts to open a door or break
open a window, she was unable to rescue
the driver, but testified that she could
not see into the sleeper compartment of
the truck to determine whether Dosanjh
was conscious following the crash.
Jurors were thus left with very little
evidence regarding whether Dosanjh had
survived the fire in a conscious state,
but a lot of evidence that if he did
survive, he met a horrible fate-- being
trapped inside the burning sleeping
compartment of an overturned truck.
Plaintiffs filled the gap with the
expert assistance of Duane MacInnis, PE,
of MacInnis Engineers of Richmond,
British Columbia who measured all inside
and outside diameters of the sleeping
compartment and compared his drawings
with photographs of the crash vehicle,
concluding that the degree and location
of crash deformation provided a pocket
of survivability for any passenger in
the sleeping compartment. Based on this
expert analysis, the jury awarded
$75,000 for pain and suffering in
anticipation of death.
Economic Loss
Finally, Plaintiff confronted a
difficulty establishing the economic
loss because the long-haul truck
driver's income tax records indicated he
had made $8,000-$12,000 per year
(Canadian) in his best years. Plaintiff
called economist Professor Michael Ruble
of Central Washington University who
projected a loss of earning capacity
based on the average long-haul truck
driver in British Columbia. Since
Dosanjh was in a start-up phase of his
business, if he succeeded, he would earn
at least the average long-haul wage. If
he did not, he would most likely close
his business and obtain a job working
for someone else as a long-haul truck
driver. Professor Ruble calculated an
economic loss, depending upon discount
rate, of between $417,000 and $477,000.
The jury awarded $500,000 in economic
loss primarily because every East Indian
witness, friend, family or neighbor, was
asked a series of questions involving
each of their relatives, where they
worked, how long they had worked there,
how much they made, so as to demonstrate
that Dosanjh's family, friends and
community was made up of hard-working,
dedicated, economically successful
individuals. In interviewing several
jurors after the trial, they reacted as
did the jurors in the two mock juries--
being reluctant to award non-economic
damages, but generous with economic
losses.
The verdict totaled $800,000: $75,000
each to the widow, the son and the
daughter, $75,000 in pain and suffering
in anticipation of death, and $500,000
in lost earning capacity. The verdict
was thus several-fold greater than the
largest personal injury or wrongful
death verdict ever before recovered in
Kittitas County.
Dosanjh v. Bhatti, Kittitas
County Cause No. 94 2 00258 1, was tried
by WSTLA Eagle Member Dean Brett of
Bellingham's Brett & Coats.
For more information on wrongful death claims, please see our Wrongful Death page or our Wrongful Death Frequently Asked Questions.


