Vol. 71, No. 6, June 1998
The Admissibility of Settlement Evidence
in Multi-defendant Tort Cases
By Daniel J. La Fave
Editor's
Note: To view Wisconsin statutory materials referenced in this
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Trial attorneys and judges need to carefully consider Anderson by Skow v. Alfa-Laval Agri Inc. in light of the precedential backdrop in Wisconsin and the developing
law in other jurisdictions to safely navigate the potential evidentiary
minefield surrounding the admissibility of settlement evidence
in multi-defendant tort cases. |
The Wisconsin Court of Appeal's treatment last year in Anderson by Skow v. Alfa-Laval Agri Inc.1 of the rule governing the admissibility of settlement evidence
interjects uncertainty into the proper role such evidence can
play at trial and signals a more restrictive approach on the subject
than taken in prior Wisconsin Supreme Court cases and in recent
decisions from other jurisdictions. Because the admissibility
of settlement evidence at trial arises frequently in the context
of multi-defendant tort cases, trial attorneys and judges in these
cases need to carefully consider Anderson in light of the precedential backdrop in Wisconsin and the developing
law in other jurisdictions to safely navigate this potential evidentiary
minefield.
When plaintiffs prosecute tort cases against numerous defendants,
economic constraints and tactical considerations frequently militate
in favor of narrowing the field through settlements to target
only select defendants at trial. In this way plaintiffs may dispose
of seemingly conflicting liability theories or those with little
jury appeal. Judicious settlements also may help fund costly trial
presentations against more promising defendants (for example,
a crashworthiness case against an automobile manufacturer).
Whatever the motivation, nonsettling defendants, who suddenly
find themselves alone in the spotlight, may be left scrambling
to retool their case to accommodate the altered terrain on short
notice. Especially in the case of 11th hour settlements, a ready
defensive response is to seek to introduce evidence of the plaintiffs'
settlement at trial to attack the credibility of plaintiffs' and
settling defendants' witnesses because of the financial interest
those witnesses have in concentrating blame solely on those who
refused to settle. Introducing settlement evidence is a potentially
incendiary device, one that could lead the jury to conclude that
the plaintiffs have received ample compensation from the real
malefactors and no further recovery is necessary.
In Anderson the Wisconsin Court of Appeals took a restrictive view of the
propriety of such defensive tactics that arguably is at odds with
earlier Wisconsin Supreme Court precedent and the developing law
in other jurisdictions, which suggest a broader role for the use
of settlement evidence at trial. Should Wisconsin appellate courts
follow the lead of other jurisdictions (not to mention earlier
state authority) it seems probable that the Anderson court's restrictive approach will give way to a more liberal
approach that vests considerable discretion in trial courts to
balance the competing policy considerations of promoting settlements
versus the equally strong policy of ensuring that Wisconsin's
evidentiary rules are applied to promote truth finding and just
resolutions of disputes.
Wisconsin's "limited" public policy favoring settlements
Wisconsin Rule of Evidence 904.08, which closely tracks its federal counterpart, governs the admissibility
of settlement evidence. It provides: "Evidence of furnishing or
offering or promising to furnish, or accepting or offering or
promising to accept, a valuable consideration in compromising
or attempting to compromise a claim which was disputed as to either
validity or amount, is not admissible to prove liability for or
invalidity of the claim or its amount. Evidence of conduct or
statements made in compromise negotiations is likewise not admissible.
This section does not require exclusion when evidence is offered
for another purpose, such as proving bias or prejudice of a witness, negativing a contention of undue delay,
proving accord and satisfaction, novation or release, or proving
an effort to compromise or obstruct a criminal investigation or
prosecution."2
The justification for excluding settlement evidence under Rule
904.08 is twofold. First, there are many reasons why people settle;
for example, they may be motivated more for a desire to buy their
peace than from any concession of weakness of position. Second,
the rule promotes "the public policy favoring the compromise and
settlement of disputes."3
However, as a plain reading of its terms reveals, the privilege
embodied in Rule 904.08 is not absolute. Indeed, the Wisconsin
Supreme Court has pointed out that the rule "provides a limited privilege against disclosure of settlements and offers to settle.
Sec. 904.08, Stats., 'does not require exclusion when the evidence
is offered for another purpose, such as proving bias or prejudice
of a witness.'"4 Until Anderson, existing precedent suggested that trial courts would be given
considerable latitude in determining what constituted sufficient
grounds to defeat this "limited privilege."
The Wisconsin precedential prelude to Anderson
In Johnson v. Heintz5 the Wisconsin Supreme Court's first real explication on the boundaries
of Rule 904.08, a defendant-driver and her insurer sought to introduce
details about a settlement the plaintiff-passenger and her husband
had brokered with one of the third party defendant-insurers before
the retrial of a case arising out of successive automobile accidents.
The trial court had permitted counsel to mention the names of
those parties originally named in the lawsuit who had settled
out, but specifically prohibited any mention of the settlement
amount. The supreme court upheld this ruling, stating that, "We
do not think sec. 904.08, Stats., allows testimony concerning
details of the compromise settlement with State Farm for the purpose
of showing bias or prejudice on behalf of the plaintiff Emaline
Johnson. To allow the admission of details including the amount
of the settlement as an exception to the rule would defeat the
purpose of the rule and render it meaningless."6
However, the Johnson court determined that the trial court should have permitted counsel
to identify which insurance companies were aligned with which
parties and to point out that plaintiffs had settled with a specific
party. The court concluded that any error was not prejudicial
though, because the defense was given every opportunity to stress
any divergence in the plaintiff's testimony. The court explained
that "the error in not allowing the topic to be pursued can in
no way be prejudicial when there are extrinsic guarantees or evidence
to refute the effect of the alleged biasing tendency. Consistent
testimony before and after the existence of the inducement could
qualify as such a situation."7
By contrast, several years later in Hareng v. Blanke the supreme court concluded that the potential for biased testimony was enough to admit settlement evidence.
There, plaintiffs had settled prior to trial with two of four
original defendants in a medical malpractice action. In appealing
an adverse verdict, plaintiffs claimed error by the trial court
in permitting the jury to learn of these settlements. The supreme
court agreed that evidence of the settlement was properly admitted
to show prejudice on the part of the plaintiff-patient as a witness
because she had a financial interest in playing down the negligence
of the settling physician and emphasizing the negligence of the
nonsettling doctors. "[W]e conclude that evidence of a settlement
can be used, as in this case, to show possible bias of a witness, although it cannot be used to prove liability
or invalidity of a claim at issue."8 Notable by its absence was any discussion suggesting that the
plaintiff-patient had in fact changed her testimony in any perceptible
way.
Considered together, the supreme court's decisions in Johnson and Hareng spelled considerable latitude by trial courts in determining
the admissibility of settlement evidence. Courts could permit
the jury to be informed of a settlement when a party had an incentive
to downplay the fault of another party (arguably true with any
settlement), or exclude it without fear of reversible error if
there was no apparent change in testimony by witnesses aligned
with the settlers. Anderson signals a less permissive approach.
The Anderson decision
Anderson involved negligence and product liability claims arising out
of an incident in which a young child ingested an extremely caustic
chemical used to clean milk lines at a dairy farm. The plaintiffs
sued more than a half dozen parties, but, prior to trial, entered
into a Pierringer9 settlement with all but the manufacturer of the milk line cleaning
equipment. The trial court denied the plaintiffs' motion in limine to exclude references to any settlement with the other defendants,
and informed the jury that a "negotiated resolution" had been
reached between plaintiffs and those defendants originally named
in the caption who were not present at trial.10
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals found that the trial court had
erred in advising the jury of the existence of the settlement
between plaintiffs and the other defendants, but concluded that
the error was harmless.11 The court of appeals disagreed with the trial court that Hareng authorized (if not mandated) the disclosure, concluding that
Hareng was inapplicable. The court of appeals reasoned, "There was no
contention that the settlement among the other defendants changed
the testimony of any witness or that the posture of any of the
settling defendants was significantly different as a result of
the settlement. While we recognize that under certain circumstances,
it may be necessary to disclose the existence of a settlement,
we conclude that none of the circumstances authorizing such a
disclosure existed in this case."12
The confusion engendered by Anderson is manifold. The court of appeal's failure to elaborate on the
"certain circumstances" justifying admitting settlement evidence
leaves trial courts and practitioners speculating. This speculation
is compounded by the fact that the court of appeals did not explain
why, in its opinion, Hareng was inapposite.
There is language in Johnson that a change in testimony could be the litmus test for determining
whether there was prejudice in excluding evidence of a settlement. However, nowhere in Hareng is there any hint that the party seeking disclosure of the settlement
must prove a perceptible change in a witness's testimony. In fact,
at no juncture in Hareng did the supreme court identify any change in the plaintiff's
testimony. Rather Hareng recognizes as sufficient to overcome the limited privilege of
Rule 904.08 the potential bias and prejudice that can occur when a party has a financial
incentive to downplay the negligence of settling parties and emphasizing
the negligence of the nonsettlers wide latitude for trial courts
indeed.
Decisions of other jurisdictions
What constitutes a significant change in posture of the parties
under Anderson also is a mystery, particularly when one considers that courts
elsewhere have viewed the Pierringer releases at issue in Anderson as involving precisely the kind of changed circumstances that
justify informing the jury of a settlement.
A Pierringer release is one in which a plaintiff agrees to satisfy that portion
of the total damages attributable to the settling defendant and
to release and discharge that percentage of his or her total claim
for damages against all parties proportionate to the negligence
the jury attributes to the settling defendant. This release "operates
to impute to the plaintiff whatever liability in contribution
or indemnity the settling joint tortfeasor may have to the nonsettling
joint tortfeasor and to bar subsequent contribution or indemnity
actions the nonsettling joint tortfeasor might assert against
the settling joint tortfeasor."13
In Frey v. Snelgrove14 the plaintiff entered into a Pierringer-type release with two of three defendants on the sixth day of
trial. In addition to the typical Pierringer language, the plaintiffs stipulated that any recovery made against
the nonsettling defendant up to $700,000 would be credited to
the amount to be paid by the settling defendants. While the Minnesota
Supreme Court held that the trial court's failure to inform the
jury of this settlement was not prejudicial, it stated that, under
such circumstances, when one of the settling defendants was called
to testify by the remaining parties, "the trial court should inform
the jury of the effect of the release, so that they might consider
any bias of the witness."15
The Frey court further noted that "[w]here the settlement agreement and
release is executed during trial, the court should usually inform
the jury that 'there has been a settlement and release' if for
no other reason than to explain the settling tortfeasor's conspicuous
absence from the courtroom"16 even though the tortfeasor is included on the verdict for the
apportionment of negligence.
The Frey court emphasized the considerable discretion vested in the trial
court on whether to admit details of the agreement, noting that
the jury should be given the facts necessary to arrive at a fair
verdict to all parties, but cautioning that as a general rule
the settlement amount should never be admitted.17
Notably, in the two reported cases following Frey, the Minnesota Court of Appeals has twice upheld the trial court's
decision to prohibit disclosure of Pierringer settlements to the jury.18 In so holding, the Minnesota Court of Appeals has recognized
the considerable discretion vested in trial courts by Frey to weigh the prejudice of disclosing settlement evidence versus
the impact on truth finding by excluding it.
For instance, in Polacec v. Voigt the estate of a passenger, who died as a result of a head-on
car crash, sued both the driver with whom the decedent had ridden
(Voigt) and the driver of the other vehicle (Polacec). Both drivers
cross-claimed against each other. The central issue in the case
was which vehicle was in the passing lane when the accident occurred.
Polacec had no recollection of the accident, and each party produced
expert testimony placing blame on the other. Shortly before trial
the decedent's estate entered into a Pierringer release with Polacec. However, the trial court refused to inform
the jury of the settlement. Voigt, who the jury found to have
been in the passing lane and therefore 100 percent at fault, claimed
the exclusion was error because it precluded him from impeaching
damaging testimony by the decedent's wife. Voigt argued: 1) the
settlement made the decedent's wife biased as she would only get
money if he were found liable; and 2) consequently, the estate's
counsel had been disingenuous when he stated in closing arguments
that the wife "was a neutral party who did not know what happened
and only cared to find the truth."19
Obviously central to the Polacec court's decision was the fact that the decedent's wife's trial
testimony was identical to her deposition testimony, which had
been given long before the settlement. Consequently, the appellate
court concluded that the trial court was justified in excluding
the evidence as the probative value of the settlement paled when
"[w]eighed against the possibility of prejudice because the jury
might believe that an individual who has settled has admitted
liability."20 Apparently, the estate counsel's potentially misleading statements
to the jury did not factor significantly in the equation, because
the court did not address them.
Significantly, the settlements in Polacec and Quill occurred before, instead of during trial, as had been the situation
in Frey. Thus, the likelihood of jurors being confused by the sudden
and inexplicable exodus of a party that previously had been actively
participating at trial, did not exist. Also diminished was the
attendant surprise to the nonsettling parties, along with potentially
awkward trial presentation adjustments that would need to be made
during trial itself. At least implicitly in these cases then,
the Minnesota Court of Appeals has not been persuaded that the
truth-finding purpose of a trial has been subject to undue distortion
when there is a Pierringer-type settlement in advance of trial, and absent a perceptible
shift in testimony by potentially biased witnesses.
Secret agreements and distorting
the jury's fact-finding function
More extreme are those cases involving agreements where the settling
parties may actively conspire to produce a given result at trial.
Perhaps most notorious among these are "Mary Carter Agreements,"
which are intended to be secret and require that the settling
defendant remain a party and defend itself in court, guarantee
that the plaintiff will receive a certain amount from the settlor
regardless of the outcome at trial, and may call for the settling
defendant to assist in increasing liability on the nonsettling
codefendants.21 Because of the manner in which this secretive realignment of
interests can gravely mislead the judge and jury, many courts
routinely disclose them to juries.22
At the other extreme, one court has gone so far as to sanction
using settlement evidence to attack the general credibility of
another party's case in addition to clarifying party alignment.
In Brocklesby v. United States23 the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that evidence of an indemnity
agreement settling the claims between the defendants was admissible
in a suit brought by the survivors of an airplane crash. The Ninth
Circuit found that the plaintiffs could properly admit the indemnity
agreement to show the relationship between the parties (that is,
whether they were adverse) and to attack the credibility of the
defendants' witnesses.24 The Brocklesby court rejected one defendant's contention that the relationship
of the parties was not at issue, reasoning that "[e]vidence relating
to the relationship of the parties tends to make their respective
positions less credible."25 The Brocklesby court also rejected the same defendant's argument that the indemnity
agreement was not used at trial to impeach the credibility of
the defendants' witnesses, pointing out that "it was not necessary
for the plaintiffs to confront each witness with the indemnity
agreement. If the existence of the indemnity agreement made the
defendants' witnesses' testimony less credible, it was admissible."26
Avoiding jury confusion
While jury confusion does not fall neatly within any of the illustrative
exceptions to Rule 904.08, they are merely that, illustrative
exceptions. Already on one occasion (albeit an unpublished decision)
the Wisconsin Court of Appeals has rejected a contrary view using
basic principles of statutory construction.27 In other jurisdictions that have essentially identical counterparts
to Rule 904.08, other than bias, the prevention of jury confusion
from the absence of certain parties is arguably the most often
invoked reason for admitting evidence of a settlement between
certain parties.28
The New Mexico Supreme Court's decision in Fahrback v. Diamond Shamrock Inc. is illustrative of these decisions. There plaintiffs brought
a personal injury action against the supplier of propane gas and
others for injuries arising out of a gas explosion at a resort
lodge. Prior to trial the plaintiffs settled with three of the
six defendants. The trial court elected to advise the jury of
the settlement prior to voir dire, reasoning that jurors find
it confusing to allocate liability among tortfeasors when they
are inexplicably not present in court. In asserting error to this
ruling plaintiffs argued, among other things, that "the jury could
have inferred that the parties who were primarily responsible
had settled with and compensated plaintiffs and that no further
compensation was appropriate."29
The Fahrback court found no error and reasoned that determining the admissibility
of settlement evidence for purposes not expressly excluded by
the rule was "within the trial court's authority to manage the
trial and rule on evidentiary matters. Whether the evidence is
admissible shall be determined by rules concerning relevancy and
possible outweighing prejudice. ... [T]his approach ... provides
the trial court the flexibility to address unusual circumstances
within familiar limitations. It neither creates unlimited discretion
nor authorizes conduct that is unreviewable as a practical matter."30 The court concluded that under the circumstances, "the trial
court properly attempted to eliminate what it reasonably perceived
as unnecessary confusion."31
Limiting instructions to minimize
inappropriate jury inferences
If the trial court concludes that settlement evidence is admissible,
a limiting instruction should be given: 1) to minimize the potential
for the jury to misuse the evidence for the party on the losing
end; and 2) to better insulate the ruling from second guessing
by the appellate courts for the proponent of the evidence especially
in the uncertain climate created by Anderson.32 Another practical reason for the first is that an appellate court
may be less sympathetic with the complaining party if he or she
has failed to request a limiting instruction.33 As to the second, especially if it appears to be a "close ruling,"
the appellate court may be less inclined to infer misuse and prejudicial
error if a neutrally worded limiting instruction is given that
effectively tracks Rule 904.08.
At a minimum, to ensure the jury understands the adversity of
the parties so that the jury can properly assess witness bias,
the instruction should clearly identify the parties to the settlement
but avoid any mention of the amount paid, which is in keeping
with the Wisconsin Supreme Court's direction in Johnson. The instruction also should make it clear that the jury is not
permitted to rely upon settlement evidence to prove liability
for or invalidity of the claim or its amount; however, jurors
may consider settlement evidence in assessing the credibility
of any of the witnesses. Whether any additional detail in such
an instruction would be appropriate, such as explaining the effect
of the settlement when there is a Pierringer-type release, will depend upon the unique circumstances in a
given case. If the trial court has a well-reasoned justification
for including a given detail, it seems more remote that prejudicial
error will be ascribed to it.
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Daniel J. La Fave, Northwestern 1992, is a trial lawyer with the
Milwaukee office of Quarles & Brady. He concentrates his practice
in products liability and personal injury defense. |
As the Minnesota decisions suggest, one circumstance that may
be integral to determining whether settlement evidence should
be disclosed is the timing of the settlement and the promptness
of its disclosure to the nonsettling defendants. Such reasoning
finds ready support in recent Wisconsin case law. In the context
of reviewing the propriety of excluding an expert's testimony
on the basis of a last minute pretrial settlement, the Wisconsin
Supreme Court in Magyar v. Wisconsin Health Care Liability Ins. Plan34 recognized that surprise, coupled with the danger of prejudice
and confusion of issues, plays a proper role in informing a trial
court's discretion when making evidentiary rulings.35
Conclusion
Although the Anderson court was unwilling to find prejudicial error from the disclosure
of settlement evidence to the jury, it nevertheless found error.
The court's ruling seems to signal a more restrictive approach
to admitting settlement evidence by promoting a line-in-the-sand
test of requiring changed testimony to establish the existence
of actual witness bias as a condition precedent to informing the
jury of a settlement. Yet the decision also engenders confusion
through its cryptic reference to changed positions of parties
and other "certain circumstances" that may justify admission of
such evidence.
In its limited discussion on the issue, Anderson fails to give much needed guidance to lower courts and practitioners
on how to properly handle this explosive evidence. Hopefully,
when Wisconsin appellate courts next consider the issue, they
will provide a more detailed examination of the subject. Should
Wisconsin appellate courts follow the lead of other jurisdictions,
the state's trial courts will be charged with considerable discretion
to weigh the competing public policies of promoting settlements
while protecting the truth-seeking function of a trial, an approach
that has a ready foundation in earlier decisions by the Wisconsin
Supreme Court, and that recognizes among the permissible purposes
the utility of advising juries of settlements to avoid jury confusion.
Until that time, practitioners and trial judges can be certain
of only one thing the amount of a settlement is taboo.
Endnotes
1 Anderson by Skow v. Alfa-Laval Agri Inc., 209 Wis. 2d 337, 564 N.W.2d 788 (Ct. App. 1997).
2 Wis. Stat. § 904.08.
3 Federal Advisory Committee's Notes reprinted in Wisconsin Rules of Evidence, 59 Wis. 2d R92; Connor v. Michigan Wisconsin Pipe Line Co., 15 Wis. 2d 614, 619-21, 113 N.W.2d 121 (1962).
4 Hareng v. Blanke, 90 Wis. 2d 158, 168, 279 N.W.2d 437 (1979) (emphasis added).
5 Johnson v. Heintz, 73 Wis. 2d 286, 243 N.W.2d 815 (1976).
6 Id. at 300, 243 N.W.2d 815.
7 Id. at 301, 243 N.W.2d 815 (citation omitted).
8 Hareng, 90 Wis. 2d at 168, 279 N.W.2d 437 (emphasis added).
9 Pierringer v. Hoger, 21 Wis. 2d 182, 124 N.W.2d 106 (1963).
10 Anderson, 209 Wis. 2d at 343, 564 N.W.2d at 791.
11 Id. at 349, 564 N.W.2d at 793.
12 Id. at 350, 564 N.W.2d at 794.
13 Brander v. Allstate Ins. Co., 181 Wis. 2d 1058, 1077, 512 N.W.2d 753 (1994) (quoted source
omitted).
14 Frey v. Snelgrove, 269 N.W.2d 918 (Minn. 1978).
15 Id. at 923.
16 Id.
17 Id.
18 Polacec v. Voigt, 385 N.W.2d 867, 869 (Minn. Ct. App. 1986); Quill v. Trans World Airlines Inc., 361 N.W.2d 438, 444 (Minn. Ct. App. 1985).
19 Polacec, 385 N.W.2d at 869.
20 Id.
21 See Booth v. Mary Carter Paint Co., 202 So. 2d 8 (Fla. Dist. App. 1967).
22 See, e.g., Quick v. Crane, 111 Idaho 759, 727 P.2d 1187, 1206 (1986) (collecting authority).
23 Brocklesby v. United States, 767 F.2d 1288 (9th Cir. 1985), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 1101 (1986).
24 Id. at 1292-93.
25 Id. 1293 n.2.
26 Id. at n.3.
27 Field Enter. v. Peter Gresser, 1987 WL 267347, Case No. 86-0054 (Wis. Ct. App. Sept. 1, 1997)
at *2.
28 See, e.g., Fahrback v. Diamond Shamrock Inc., 122 N.M. 543, 928 P.2d 269, 275 (1996) ("trial court properly
attempted to eliminate what it reasonably perceived as unnecessary
confusion" in informing jury of plaintiffs' prior settlement with
several defendants); Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp. v. American Centennial Ins. Co., 74 Ohio Misc. 2d 272, 660 N.E.2d 828, 831 (Ct. Com. Pl. 1995)
(court admitted settlement evidence in order to avoid "confusion
and speculation by the jurors, resulting in unfair prejudice");
Kennon v. Slipstreamer Inc., 794 F.2d 1067, 1070 (5th Cir. 1986) ("In a case such as this
one, where the absence of defendants previously in court might
confuse the jury, the district court may ... inform the jury of
the settlement in order to avoid confusion.").
29 Fahrback, 928 P.2d at 273.
30 Id. at 274.
31 Id. at 275.
32 See D.L. by Friederichs v. Huebner, 110 Wis. 2d 581, 608, 329 N.W.2d 890 (1983) ("The adequacy of
the limiting instruction is a factor the circuit court can take
into account in exercising its discretion under sec. 904.03.");
Stoppleworth v. Refuse Hideaway Inc., 200 Wis. 2d 512, 524, 546 N.W.2d 870 (1996) (any potential for
prejudice from identifying the position of a named party is "aptly
addressed by use of [a] curative instruction").
33 See, e.g., Fahrback, 928 P.2d at 275 ("In the absence of a request for a limiting
instruction ... we cannot say the trial court erred in phrasing
its remarks.").
34 Magyar v. Wisconsin Health Care Liability Ins. Plan, 211 Wis. 2d 296, 564 N.W.2d 766 (1997).
35 See id., 564 N.W.2d at 769-71.
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