Nolen Scott Ely, et al v. Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation and Gassearch Drilling Services Corproation
Filing
799
MEMORANDUM OPINION re 756 MOTION for Judgment as a Matter of Law MOTION for New Trial MOTION to Set Aside Verdict MOTION for Damages Remittitur filed by Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation. Signed by Magistrate Judge Martin C. Carlson on March 31, 2017. (kjn)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
NOLEN SCOTT ELY, et al.,
Plaintiffs
v.
CABOT OIL & GAS
CORPORATION, et al.,
Defendants
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Civil No. 3:09-CV-2284
(Magistrate Judge Carlson)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
I.
INTRODUCTION
The process of litigation often transforms, sharpens and defines disputes. As
a result, frequently the case that is actually presented at trial is very different than
the case that the parties imagined when they began the litigation. Therefore,
litigation by its very nature presents the potential for either clarity or confusion.
Clarity in litigation comes from a candid recognition of how the law, the facts and
the clash of ideas, re-defines the issues and claims in a case over time. Confusion
erupts when a party fails to see their case as it is, but instead persists in attempting
to present that case as they wished it would be.
So it is here.
On March 10, 2016, following a nearly three-week trial that capped more
than six years of litigation, an eight-person jury seated in Scranton, Pennsylvania
found in favor of nine plaintiffs on claims that Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation’s
drilling activity at two gas wells in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania was
negligent and caused the plaintiffs’ compensable nuisance injuries by interfering
with and damaging the plaintiffs’ access to water and their enjoyment of their
property. This claim, which was the sole claim submitted to the jury, differed
significantly from the claims described six years earlier in the plaintiffs’ complaint.
It also varied materially from the claims that the plaintiffs led to jury to believe
would be presented to them at the outset of this trial.
Further, although the
evidence offered in support of the plaintiffs’ sole remaining claims was limited,
often substantially rebutted or discredited, and notably lacking with respect to
damages, the jury found in the plaintiffs’ favor and awarded them $4.24 million in
the aggregate.
After the jury’s verdict had been delivered and the panel was dismissed from
the courtroom, Cabot advised the Court and the plaintiffs that it intended to renew
its motion for judgment notwithstanding the jury’s verdict, or alternatively seek a
new trial.
Now pending before the Court is Cabot’s motion seeking three
alternative forms of relief from the jury’s judgment in this case: judgment as a
matter of law pursuant to Rule 50 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; a new
2
trial pursuant to Rule 59 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; or remittitur of
the jury’s damages award. (Doc. 756.) The parties have filed hundreds of pages in
briefs in support of and opposition to Cabot’s motion. (Docs. 762, 763, 765, 787,
788, 792, 797, 798.) With these voluminous submissions, the briefing on the
motion is now concluded and Cabot’s motion is ripe for adjudication.
For the reasons that follow, although the Court agrees with Cabot that the
evidence presented in support of the plaintiffs’ claims was spare, sometimes
contradictory, frequently rebutted by other scientific expert testimony, and relied in
some measure upon tenuous inferences, giving full deference to that verdict under
the exacting standards prescribed by law, the Court does not agree that Cabot has
demonstrated that it is entitled to have judgment entered in the company’s favor.
The legal standards for granting judgment in favor of the losing party are
appropriately high and difficult to surmount, and in this case we find that that
Cabot has not met that high standard, since the evidence may permit a narrow path
for limited success by the plaintiffs, albeit on a claim framed in a manner that is
very different from the claims argued by the plaintiffs before this jury.
However, the Court does agree with Cabot that the weaknesses in the
plaintiffs’ case and proof, coupled with serious and troubling irregularities in the
testimony and presentation of the plaintiffs’ case – including repeated and
regrettable missteps by counsel in the jury’s presence – combined so thoroughly to
3
undermine faith in the jury’s verdict that it must be vacated and a new trial
ordered. Moreover, the jury’s award of more than $4 million in damages for
private nuisance bore no discernible relationship to the evidence, which was at best
limited; and even were the Court to find that the jury’s verdict of liability should
stand, the Court can perceive no way in which the jury’s damages award could
withstand even passing scrutiny regardless of the applicable standard of review.
We do not take this step lightly, and we recognize the significance of
voiding the judgment of a panel of jurors who sat through nearly three weeks of
trial and reached a unanimous verdict. Nevertheless, upon consideration of the
trial record, and following reflection on the substantial and varied weaknesses in
the plaintiffs’ case together with the myriad examples of inappropriate conduct that
repeatedly occurred in the jury’s presence and may have colored the outcome of
this case, the Court is constrained to find that a new trial is not only justified, but
required. Accordingly, Cabot’s motion will be granted in part, the verdict will be
set aside, and a new trial will be ordered.1
Before any trial is held, however, the Court will direct that the parties engage in
meaningful settlement discussions with the assistance of another Magistrate Judge
of this Court to determine whether a mutually agreeable, and sensible, resolution of
the plaintiffs’ remaining claims may be obtained without the need for a second
trial, with the risks and costs that it necessarily will involve. At this point, the
litigative risks and the costs to all parties associated with trying the remaining
claims are obvious. Given the time, money, and effort that has been put into this
litigation to date, the Court will require that the parties undertake an effort to
determine whether settlement of the plaintiffs’ remaining claims is possible.
4
1
II.
BACKGROUND
This civil litigation commenced nearly eight years ago, when 44 plaintiffs
and neighbors from Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania collectively sued Cabot
Oil & Gas Corporation for injuries and property damage allegedly suffered as the
result of the defendants’ natural gas drilling operations in Dimock Township, a
rural community situated in Susquehanna County. Subsequently, a number of the
plaintiffs reached settlement agreements with Cabot, eventually leaving only 9
plaintiffs who refused to reach a pre-trial resolution of their claims. Those holdout
plaintiffs include Nolen Scott Ely and his wife Monica L. Marta-Ely, individually
and as parents to three minor children (the “Elys”); and Ray and Victoria Hubert,
individually, and as parents of one minor child, as well as a child who since
reached the age of majority, Angel Hubert (the “Huberts”).2
As the number of plaintiffs in this lawsuit gradually reduced, so did the
remaining plaintiffs’ claims reduce in number and scope.
When the lawsuit was initiated, the Elys, Huberts and dozens of other
Dimock plaintiffs launched a legal broadside on Cabot’s expansive drilling activity
in the northern tier of Pennsylvania, and in Susquehanna County in particular. As
part of this legal assault, the plaintiffs brought claims for breach of contract,
Nolen Ely is also the executor for the Estate of Kenneth R. Ely, which was one
of the plaintiffs that brought multiple claims against the defendants. Those claims
were dismissed after the Court found the Estate had not adduced sufficient
evidence to support them.
5
2
fraudulent inducement, private nuisance, negligence, negligence per se, claims for
medical monitoring, and alleged violations of a variety of Pennsylvania
environmental laws.
The plaintiffs also endeavored to show that natural gas
drilling represented an abnormally dangerous activity that should cause it to be
subject to strict liability under Pennsylvania law – something that no court in
Pennsylvania has ever found.
However fashioned or labeled, litigation in this action made clear that the
primary thrust of the plaintiffs’ claims was that the defendants’ oil and gas drilling
activities caused injury to the plaintiffs’ access to safe water from the wells on the
property where they live by polluting their well water. Although many other
residents welcomed the industry’s arrival and expansion, and the economic
benefits that some realized as a result, this litigation represented the concerted
push-back of others in the same community against the encroachment of the
natural gas industry upon communities like Dimock, which claimed to have
experienced unwelcome change to the local natural environment, erosion of the
bucolic surroundings, and – most especially – the alleged impairment of the local
drinking water as a result of the industry’s expansion in the area.
Over the intervening years, this expansive legal strategy against Cabot and
other natural gas concerns gradually winnowed and the remaining claims reduced
in both number and scope. Dozens of the plaintiffs settled their claims, but the
6
Elys and Huberts pushed forward.
Following years of litigation, periodic
enlargement of the discovery period to accommodate the Ely and Hubert plaintiffs
as they were represented by a rotating cast of attorneys, as well as stints during
which the plaintiffs were without counsel, Cabot moved for summary judgment
against their remaining claims.
The undersigned prepared reports and recommendations with respect to the
motions, recommending that the District Court grant the motions entirely with
respect to the Estate’s claims, and with respect to all of the Ely and Hubert family
claims except for the claims of negligence and private nuisance. In so doing, the
Court recognized that the plaintiffs’ surviving claims rested upon relatively limited
evidence that was itself subject to vigorous dispute by the defendants.
Nevertheless, the Court also found that viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to Elys and the Huberts, and granting all reasonable inferences in their
favor, the negligence and nuisance claims had sufficient evidentiary support to go
to trial.
After the district court adopted the reports and recommendations, the parties
consented to proceed before the undersigned for the remainder of the litigation. At
this point, following the rulings that granted Cabot’s motions for summary
judgment in substantial part, the litigation became significantly more limited in its
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scope, as the plaintiffs’ claims had been pared back, and their theories of liability
substantially curtailed.
Unfortunately, the plaintiffs proceeded to trial in late February 2016 as if
their claims remained largely unaffected by these events or the court’s rulings.
The plaintiffs adopted a strategy which suggested they did not fully appreciate or
acknowledge the significant limitations that had been imposed on their case against
Cabot, and on the evidence that they could rely upon in front of a jury to prove
their remaining claims. The plaintiffs’ own failure to recognize the substantive
change to their claims and the evidentiary limitations that would accordingly
govern at trial was facilitated by a trial strategy which regrettably failed to abide
the Court’s orders and trial rulings regarding evidentiary matters and matters of
basic civil practice. As a result, the manner in which this case was prosecuted had
the effect of repeatedly inviting the jury to engage in unwarranted speculation that
was plainly prejudicial to the defense. This constellation of serious problems
thoroughly undermined the $4.24 million verdict that the jury ultimately rendered
in favor of the plaintiffs. These grave concerns, which now combine to undermine
confidence in this verdict and compel a new trial, were foreshadowed in pretrial
proceedings.
On February 12, 2016, at a pretrial conference, the Court was presented with
a startling issue that had arisen: despite having been preparing for this litigation
8
for many years, the plaintiffs had failed to provide or identify scores of documents
that they now first proposed to introduce at trial. Cabot, reasonably, moved to
exclude these undisclosed materials, and the Court was constrained to enter an
Order excluding more than 300 of the plaintiffs’ proposed trial exhibits resulting
from counsel’s “completely unexplained, and wildly kaleidoscopic” submission of
“voluminous, contradictory, cryptic, confused and confusing” exhibit lists. (Doc.
685, pp. 1-2 and n.1.) Indeed, the Court was compelled to acknowledge that never
in the undersigned’s 36-years as a federal court litigator and judge had the Court
“[ever] observed a wholesale discovery default of this scope and dimension” and it
was thus something that constituted “an unprecedented event in our experience.”
(Id.) This ruling, which the plaintiffs’ vigorously contested, was compelled by the
plaintiffs’ wholly unexplained production of thousands of pages of exhibits, and
over 300 categories of exhibits, which had never previously been identified, and in
some cases even produced, over the course of the entire litigation. Thus, the Court
found itself confronted on the eve of trial by a profound tension between what the
plaintiffs wished their case to be and what it was in fact. This tension was
exemplified by the plaintiffs’ interest in using countless previously undisclosed
exhibits at a trial that was more than six years in the making and the defendant’s
interest in not being ambushed with a trial-by-surprise. This tension, and others
substantially similar, would bedevil this case over its duration.
9
The plaintiffs’ casual approach to identifying their exhibits in a “vague,
ever-changing, and idiosyncratic form that continues to take still new shape even
with trial approximately one week away” compelled the conclusion that “the
plaintiffs’ disregard of their obligation to produce discovery in a timely manner,
and to timely and intelligibly identify trial exhibits in accordance with the Court’s
Local Rules and prior orders” required that the plaintiffs be limited to the 24
exhibits that they had identified in their pretrial memoranda. (Id.)
The Court includes reference to this tragic pretrial event because it offered a
worrisome preview of what was to come once a jury was empaneled: a failure to
reconcile the plaintiffs’ case as they imagined it with the significantly changed
legal and factual landscape of this litigation.
The plaintiffs’ case had been
substantially, and appropriately, narrowed by the District Court’s ruling on
summary judgment. The plaintiffs’ documentary evidence in support of these
narrowed claims had been made narrower still through their own pretrial missteps
and disregard of the Court’s orders.
The plaintiffs were thus faced with an
especially narrow path to prove their remaining claims, and the plaintiffs were
made explicitly aware of just how narrow that path was. Yet, the plaintiffs, their
witnesses, and their counsel proved unable to stay within the narrow boundaries
that had been set by legal rulings in this case – rulings that were compelled by the
law, the evidence that had been adduced, and the plaintiff’s own pretrial conduct.
10
The exclusion of the plaintiffs’ proposed exhibits would be a harbinger of
what would follow over the course of trial, with numerous instances in which the
plaintiffs’ witnesses were invited to stray from the confines of what they were
permitted to discuss to offer passing commentary about other drilling activity in
the area; to hint at other matters unrelated to the plaintiffs’ claims that suggested
Cabot engaged in prior misconduct; or to suggest to the jury that there were
additional admissible factual issues that they were not permitted to discuss but
were obviously relevant to the plaintiffs’ claims. The aggregate effect of this
repeated trespass into prohibited areas was compounded during a highly irregular
closing argument, which ultimately created the impression for the jury that Cabot
must have been responsible for all of the plaintiffs’ alleged water problems –
problems that began before the Gesford wells were drilled, a fact that we now
know because the plaintiffs stipulated to it before trial.
This course of conduct is particularly regrettable because, as we discuss
below, there was a narrow path the plaintiffs could have pursued to properly
litigate some of their surviving claims. The existence of this path, which can be
discerned from the evidence when that evidence is construed in a light most
favorable to the plaintiffs, leads us to decline Cabot’s invitation to find for the
defendant as a matter of law. However, by eschewing this path, and instead
steering an erratic course in contravention of the Court’s rulings and admonitions
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which led to confusion and prejudice, the plaintiffs have compelled us to grant the
defendant’s motion for new trial. As explained below, the myriad problems that
occurred at trial, both respect to the plaintiffs’ proof and counsel’s conduct,
resulted in a verdict and damages award that is impossible to sustain.
III.
DISCUSSION
A.
Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law
We begin by addressing Cabot’s motion for judgment as a matter of law
pursuant to Rule 50(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Cabot has
presented an exhaustive argument in support of this aspect of its motion that
presents multiple arguments as to why it is entitled to have judgment entered in its
favor regardless of the evidence presented. With few exceptions, these were also
arguments that Cabot made prior to trial, either in its motion for summary
judgment, or in motions in limine that sought to exclude or limit certain testimony,
particularly that of the plaintiff’s hydrology expert, Paul Rubin. Thus, in a number
of particulars Cabot has essentially repeated and amplified those arguments again
in its post-trial motion, which can reasonably be read as a motion seeking
reconsideration of the Court’s prior rulings masquerading as a motion for judgment
as a matter of law.
The Court has studied Cabot’s motion carefully, as it has done with all of the
motions that the parties have filed over the past several years. The Court has also
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examined the trial record, and is intimately familiar with that record, which Cabot
now urges the Court to discuss in great detail. The Court’s consideration of that
record does not, however, cause the Court to reconsider its prior rulings with
respect to expert testimony; the right of the Huberts to prosecute a claim for private
nuisance; or the narrow scope of the claims that were permitted to proceed to trial.
The Court further is bound to consider these matters in accordance with the highly
deferential standard of review that must be used after a jury has reached a verdict.
Consideration of the testimony offered at trial in the context of this deferential
standard of review causes the Court to find that although the jury’s verdict must be
set aside and a new trial ordered in this case, Cabot is not entitled to judgment in
its favor on the very narrow claims that the Court previously found the plaintiffs
were entitled to try before a jury.
Cabot’s arguments fall predominately into two categories.
First, Cabot
argues that because the plaintiffs’ stipulated as to the date on which Cabot first
began drilling the Gesford wells, and because that date comes after the time that
the plaintiffs represented that they began experiencing problems with their water,
Cabot is necessarily entitled to judgment because any other result would be absurd,
and lead to the conclusion that a cause did not precede the alleged effect.
Second, Cabot takes aim at the testimony of the plaintiffs’ expert witnesses,
Paul Rubin and Dr. Anthony Ingraffea, arguing that Rubin’s testimony should have
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been disallowed entirely and failed in any event to offer anything probative with
respect to an underground pathway in which water flowed from the Gesford wells
to the underground aquifers that fed the plaintiffs’ water wells. Cabot also argues
that Dr. Ingraffea’s testimony was deeply flawed, relied upon a number of
unreasonable and unsupported inferences, was highly prejudicial, and failed to
connect with Rubin’s testimony to allow a jury to find that Cabot was negligent in
its drilling and cementing of the Gesford wells after they experienced faults. Cabot
argues that Ingraffea’s testimony was so flawed, and so thoroughly rebutted by
Cabot’s own experts, that it could not be used by a jury to infer that any failure in
cementing the wells allowed gas to migrate into an aquifer that fed into the
plaintiffs’ water supply.3
1.
Standard of Review Under Rule 50
After a party has been fully heard on an issue during trial, Rule 50 of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure allows a court to grant a motion for judgment as a
Cabot also revisits an argument it previously made, and which the Court
previously ruled upon, by arguing that the Hubert family should be precluded from
bringing a claim for private nuisance because they do not hold a legally protectable
interest in their home and its water supply because they merely live on property
owned by the Elys, and do not hold any legally recognized tenancy in that land.
The Court rejected that argument earlier, and found that Pennsylvania law would
permit the Huberts, who have maintained a home on the property for decades, to
maintain a nuisance claim. Cabot essentially amplifies its earlier argument, and is
seeking reconsideration of that ruling. The Court stands by its previous treatment
of this issue, which was adopted by the District Court, and declines to reconsider it
here. Cabot has preserved this issue if it wishes to seek further review by the Third
Circuit, if warranted, following a new trial.
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3
matter of law, or a new trial, if the court finds “that a reasonable jury would not
have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the party on that issue[.]”
Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a). Where a party has made a Rule 50 motion before the matter
is submitted to the jury, and where that motion has been denied, the party may
renew the motion following trial, as Cabot has done here. Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b).
When presented with such a motion, the court may either let the verdict stand,
order a new trial, or direct entry of judgment as a matter of law in favor on the
moving party. Id.
Although available under the Rules, “judgment as a matter of law should be
granted sparingly.” Avaya Inc., RP v. Telecom Labs, Inc., 838 F.3d 354, 373 (3d
Cir. 2016) (quoting Goodman v. Pa. Tpk. Comm’n, 293 F.3d 655, 665 (3d Cir.
2002)); see also Bender v. Norfolk S. Corp., 31 F. Supp. 3d 659, 664 (M.D. Pa.
2014) (“Judgment as a matter of law should be used sparingly and may be granted
only if, ‘as a matter of law, the record is critically deficient in that minimum
quantity of evidence from which a jury might reasonably afford relief.’”) (quoting
Whelan v. Teledyne Metalworking Prods., 226 F. App’x 141, 145 (3d Cir. 2007)
(quoting Trabal v. Wells Fargo Armored Serv. Corp., 269 F.3d 243, 249 (3d Cir.
2001)).
Thus, as the Third Circuit explained in Avaya, a motion for judgment as a
matter of law brought pursuant to Rule 50 should be granted only if, “viewing the
15
evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant and giving it the advantage
of every fair and reasonable inference, there is insufficient evidence from which a
jury reasonably could find liability.” Avaya, 838 F.3d at 373 (quoting Lightning
Lube, Inc. v. Witco Corp., 4 F.3d 1153, 1166 (3d Cir. 1993)). In considering the
evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the court must also
give the nonmoving party “the benefit of all reasonable inferences, even though
contrary inferences might reasonably be drawn.” In re Lemington Home for the
Aged, 777 F.3d 620 626 (3d Cir. 2015) (citing Dudley v. S. Jersey Metal, Inc., 555
F.2d 96, 101 (3d Cir. 1977)). Additionally, a court must not make credibility
determinations or weigh the evidence when considering the motion. Reeves v.
Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530 U.S. 133, 150-51 (2000). Instead, “the court
should review the record as a whole, [and] it must disregard all evidence favorable
to the moving party that the jury is not required to believe.” Id. At the same time,
the court may grant the motion “if upon review of the record, it can be said as a
matter of law that the verdict is not supported by legally sufficient evidence.”
Borrell v. Bloomsburg Univ., No. 3:12-CV-2123, 2016 WL 4988061, at *2 (M.D.
Pa. Sept. 19, 2016) (citing Parkway Garage, Inc. v. City of Phila., 5 F.3d 685, 69192 (3d Cir. 1993)). “The question is not whether there is literally no evidence
supporting the non-moving party, but whether there is evidence upon which the
jury could properly find for the non-moving party.” Id. at *2.
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2.
The Effect of the Stipulation on the Plaintiffs’ Claims
Cabot first argues that no reasonable jury could have found for the plaintiffs
because the plaintiffs have admitted that problems with their water began before
the date that all parties agree Cabot began drilling the two Gesford wells in late
September 2008. (Doc. 696, ¶22; N.T. 2/24 56:14-57:6.) The plaintiffs repeatedly
attempted at trial to distance themselves from this agreement once it became
apparent that the September 2008 drilling or “spud” date came after the plaintiffs
had made reports of trouble with their water, as the problem this presented for their
claims was obvious. Although the plaintiffs were offered on multiple occasions
the opportunity to challenge the effect of the stipulation appropriately outside the
presence of the jury, they declined to do so. Instead, they seemingly shifted their
focus to offer new and different theories regarding Cabot’s alleged activities near
the drill sites that preceded the actual spud date, and Mr. Ely in particular testified
that the drilling occurred in June or July, 2008 – something that was simply
inconsistent with the plaintiffs’ stipulation, which the Court ultimately found to be
binding for purposes of trial. (N.T. 2/29 49:1-7, 213:19-23.)
Since the plaintiffs rested their case-in-chief, Cabot has maintained that the
defense was entitled to judgment in its favor because the plaintiffs’ own
admissions establish irrefutably that Cabot’s Gesford wells could not have been the
cause of the plaintiffs’ alleged water problems because the plaintiffs admitted that
17
those problems existed before Cabot ever broke ground on either well. Cabot
argues that the plaintiffs’ case crumbles on the very issue of causation, since at trial
the plaintiffs were boxed in by the stipulation.
According to Cabot, this
represented game, set and match in this case since the plaintiffs’ case defied the
basic science of cause-and-effect. Cabot has now argued, once again, that the
plaintiffs’ admissions in this regard foreclose their entire case.
The evidence unquestionably showed that the plaintiffs had begun
experiencing some problems with their water before the spud date for the Gesford
wells. Mr. Ely prepared a handwritten document in 2009 noting the problems
began in the summer of 2008, (Cabot Ex. 96), and Mr. Ely testified at trial that
problems began in August 2008. (N.T. 2/23 126:20-127:13, 191:15-192:2, 210:21212:10.)
On cross-examination, Mr. Ely emphasized that his family “began
noticing issues with our water in August of 2008.” (N.T. 2/23 212:3-10.) A day
after giving this testimony, Mr. Ely reaffirmed it, noting that there was nothing
about his prior testimony that he wanted to change. (N.T. 2/24 24:14-17.) Mrs.
Ely testified similarly. (N.T. 2/24 78:14-19.)
For his part, Ray Hubert testified that he began noticing problems with his
own well in July 2008.
(N.T. 2/24 171:12-20, 210:23-211:3.)
Mrs. Hubert
testified that problems began in August 2008. (N.T. 2/25 27:10-23.) Hope Hubert
testified similarly that problems began during the summer of 2008. (N.T. 3/3 30:518
11, 37:17-21.) Angel Hubert hedged somewhat in her own testimony, but on
cross-examination agreed that changes to the family water began in the summer.
(N.T. 3/3 64:18-66.)
The Court recognized that the plaintiffs’ own testimony, coupled with the
binding stipulation regarding the actual date of drilling, presented a significant
problem for the plaintiffs’ case. Nevertheless, the Court cautiously permitted the
case to proceed, and ultimately go to the jury, in part because there was some
evidence which tended to show that the plaintiffs’ problems with their water
worsened and continued into 2009, and the plaintiffs’ experts and third-party
witnesses all offered testimony that combined to provide some basis for the jury to
consider whether Cabot’s drilling activity contributed to the alleged contamination
of the plaintiffs’ water.
In making this judgment we were mindful of the fact that
parties may pursue negligence claims even in setting where there may be a number
of factors contributing to the injury suffered, provided the plaintiffs show that the
defendant’s negligence was a proximate cause of their injury.
There was some evidence of this type presented at trial. Mr. Ely testified
that problems became considerably worse after the drilling began. (N.T. 2/24
47:16-19.) Testimony regarding ongoing and worsening problems was, to some
degree, corroborated by the testimony of Michael O’Donnell, an agent with the
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. Mr. O’Donnell testified
19
that the plaintiffs communicated with him in January 2009 regarding concerns over
their water and he became engaged in an investigation into the issue on behalf of
DEP.4 (N.T. 3/2 76:21-77:7.) Mr. O’Donnell personally observed that the Ely
water was “strongly effervescent.” (N.T. 3/2 78:22.) Mr. O’Donnell testified that
“strong effervescence [is] an indication to us in the work I do that there’s – there
may be methane present.” (N.T. 3/2 79:7-9.) Mr. O’Donnell confirmed that there
was, in fact, methane present in the plaintiffs’ water. (N.T. 3/2 79:8-9.) He
testified that upon observation of the Huberts’ water, it too was effervescent,
though less so than the Elys’. (N.T. 3/2 79:13-14.)
Mr. O’Donnell testified that he detected free methane in the Huberts’ water
well pit, which was a particular concern. (N.T. 3/2 83:22-25.) Mr. O’Donnell
testified that he visited the Gesford well pad and personally observed bubbling in
the Gesford 3 well cellar after January 2009, something that is an indication of gas
escaping from the well bore. (N.T. 3/2 84:14-85:15.) Although he was prevented
from testifying regarding regulatory investigations specifically, Mr. O’Donnell
testified that he estimated that he took sampling from the Ely well on six to twelve
separate occasions after this time. (N.T. 3/2 87:8-9.) He also testified that at this
point the Hubert well had been taken offline because of concerns regarding high
methane levels and, therefore, could not be sampled, but that air sampling was
Mr. O’Donnell’s testimony regarding the DEP’s investigation was limited by
pretrial rulings excluding evidence of administrative actions and settlements.
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4
performed on multiple occasions. (N.T. 3/2 87:11-17.) In response to questions
from the Court, Mr. O’Donnell testified that the last time he observed the Ely or
Hubert wells was in “late 2010” during which he sampled their water supplies and
determined that the levels of dissolved methane present was “similar to the
dissolved methane in some of the earlier samples that we collected.” (N.T. 3/2
94:1-20.) Based on his recollection, Mr. O’Donnell testified that the methane
levels in the plaintiffs’ water wells were between 20 and 30 milligrams per liter,
more than seven to eight times that the DEP considered to be safe; later, Mr.
O’Donnell stated that the methane levels in the Ely water reached 64 milligrams
per liter. (N.T. 3/2 96:14-16.)
The jury also heard limited testimony from two of the plaintiffs’ neighbors,
Erik Roos and Victoria Switzer, over Cabot’s objection. These witnesses offered
some testimony that was relevant to the jury’s consideration of temporality and
causation, or the likelihood that Cabot’s drilling activity at the nearby wells
contributed to the problems with the plaintiffs’ water that persisted over a long
period of time.
These witnesses, who resided in close proximity to the plaintiffs’ homes,
testified that they experienced detrimental changes in their water quality after
Cabot commenced its drilling operations nearby. For his part, Mr. Roos testified
that the water coming from his faucet was “spurting more, more often, after they
21
started drilling [in his area].” (3/1 N.T. 231:17-19.) He testified that a Cabot
representative contacted him and that a vent was placed on his well pipe in order to
deal with “a lot of extra methane.” (3/1 N.T. 233:3-234:3.) He testified that
methane continues to be monitored, and that he and his wife still do not consume
the water from their well because methane levels remain too high. (3/1 N.T.
237:23-238:8.)
For her part, Ms. Switzer testified to the extent of drilling
operations in the area throughout 2008, and testified that late that year she
experienced, for the first time, having black water coming out of her taps. (N.T.
3/2 40:19-22.) Acknowledging Cabot’s assertions that this testimony from the
neighbors was erroneously admitted, the Court disagreed at trial and permitted this
limited testimony that was relevant to the jury’s assessment of the likelihood that
Cabot’s drilling activity impacted the plaintiffs’ wells.
3.
Though Limited and Problematic, the Plaintiffs’ Expert
Testimony Provided Some Additional Basis for the Jury to
Evaluate the Plaintiffs’ Claims
In addition to the fact witness testimony, the jury heard testimony from the
plaintiffs’ experts, Paul Rubin and Anthony Ingraffea, which also added to the
information the jury had to consider whether Cabot’s drilling impacted the
plaintiffs’ water supplies, and whether its conduct was negligent. Indeed, the
plaintiffs largely relied on the testimony from these experts to establish that
Cabot’s drilling and cementing of the wells was negligent, that the subsurface
22
structure of earth in this area was highly fractured, and that Cabot’s drilling
activity permitted methane to flow into underground aquifers that wound up
polluting the plaintiffs’ water wells. This testimony was, in the Court’s estimation,
riddled with problems and limitations, but it nonetheless did add to the tapestry of
evidence that the jury could consider in evaluating the plaintiffs’ claims, and may
have provided some additional basis for the jury to reach inferences regarding the
impact of drilling in late 2008 and into 2009.
The first of these expert witnesses was the plaintiffs’ hydrology expert, Paul
Rubin.
Prior to trial, Cabot filed a Daubert motion seeking to have Rubin
excluded as an expert. On February 1, 2016, the Court held a hearing during
which Mr. Rubin testified over several hours.
Following that hearing, and
following consideration of the parties’ substantial briefs submitted in opposition to,
and in support of, his proposed expert testimony, the Court issued a 39-page
decision that excluded much of Mr. Rubin’s proposed testimony because of a lack
of testing and actual data to support many of his conclusions. However, the Court
found that he would be permitted to testify with respect to the fracturing that he
had observed in the Dimock area, and that he was competent to testify in general
terms about the way in which subsurface water migrates, and regarding
contaminants that he found in the Elys’ water in 2011. (Doc. 696.)
23
The Court recognizes that Cabot believes that Mr. Rubin’s testimony should
have been disallowed entirely, but that issue was previously ruled on, and narrow
parameters were accordingly set for Mr. Rubin to testify in a limited scope
regarding the geological features that existed in the area of the plaintiffs’ homes
and the Gesford wells that were marked by fractures, fissures and joints through
which he testified that water could flow. During trial, Mr. Rubin offered such
testimony, and while he did not – and could not – testify as to a single pathway
through which subsurface water traveled to the plaintiffs’ wells, he did testify as to
potential pathways for subsurface migration in the relevant geographic area based
upon his own observations and understanding of geology in the area. He also
offered very limited testimony regarding the results of water testing that he
performed in 2011.
Cabot subjected Rubin to lengthy cross-examination, and endeavored to
show, repeatedly, that his conclusions were little more than speculation.
Nevertheless, Rubin did testify that he had observed geological characteristics such
as faults at a quarry located approximately one-half mile from the plaintiffs’ water
wells. (N.T. 2/25 148:11-12, 158:3-5.) He admitted that he had not identified a
single joint, set, fault or other pathway through which chemicals or other
substances traveled from the Gesford wells to the plaintiffs’ water supplies. (N.T.
2/25 166:16-24.) Instead, Rubin was able only to testify that in this particular area
24
of Dimock, there were numerous potential pathways that could facilitate
subsurface movement, and he concluded based upon his professional experience
and observation that these same characteristics that he observed at the quarry
would have been in place on the plaintiffs’ property and the Gesford well pads.
Cabot argues forcefully that Rubin’s testimony was simply rank speculation,
since he did not perform any particular measurements or other examination of the
plaintiffs’ property that would have allowed him to conclude that the fractures and
faults that he observed at the quarry actually extended to the Gesford pads or the
plaintiffs’ wells, or that underground pathways fed the plaintiffs’ aquifers. Hence,
Cabot argues that Rubin’s testimony was vague, imprecise, speculative and unscientific, and ultimately had the pernicious effect of inviting the jury to speculate
impermissibly that gas or other constituents migrated from the Gesford wells to the
plaintiffs’ water, even though Rubin had offered no testimony that could support
this conclusion.
As before, the Court continues to find that Rubin’s testimony was
permissible within the narrow confines that had been set by the Court’s Daubert
ruling, and the Court finds that this testimony had some limited probative value
with respect to the plaintiffs’ claims. Cabot has failed to persuade the Court that
Rubin should have been prohibited from testifying simply because he was unable
to identify a single pathway through which water and other substances could have
25
migrated to the wells; he testified in keeping with the limited scope of his
examination of the area, and his understanding of what the faulting and fracturing
in the area would mean with respect to potential subsurface migration. Despite
Cabot’s thorough critique of this witness’ testimony, the Court finds that his
testimony offered at least a minimal foundation from which a jury could make
inferences, when this testimony was considered with that of the plaintiffs’ fact
witnesses and Dr. Ingraffea, who provided testimony regarding well bore integrity
and testified about his opinion that Cabot’s drilling activity and cementing of the
Gesford wells was negligent.
The plaintiffs also relied on the testimony of Dr. Ingraffea, professor
emeritus of engineering at Cornell University, to provide the jury with a basis to
conclude the Cabot’s drilling activity and the efforts the company later took to plug
its wells was faulty. As it did with Rubin’s testimony, Cabot argues that Dr.
Ingraffea’s testimony lacked an adequate foundation and was, in the end, little
more than raw speculation on his part – in fact, Cabot also argues that Dr. Ingraffea
offered testimony that was inappropriate, unduly speculative, or otherwise
insufficient to permit a jury to infer that Cabot’s drilling activity was more likely
than not a contributing factor to the plaintiffs’ contaminated water supplies. The
Court agrees that Dr. Ingraffea’s opinion testimony, which was not challenged
pretrial through a Daubert motion, was problematic in some particulars because it
26
admittedly rested in some measure upon conclusions that had a limited empirical
basis for support. (N.T. 2/29 216:6-14, 218:1-7, 219:2-6) (explaining his theory
that the plaintiffs’ water was impacted by “gas that was coming from activities
initiated on the 3S well by going through the 1,500 foot gas show” and then
traveling over to the Gesford 3/9DD well bore, and somehow migrating up that
well bore.) Dr. Ingraffea also conceded that he had no direct proof of this theory
of gas migration. In fact, at one juncture, Dr. Ingraffea agreed with Cabot’s
counsel that his opinion could be referred to as speculative. (N.T. 2/29 227:2-4,
230:14-21.) This admission is nearly fatal to this expert testimony, particularly
when coupled with Rubin’s limited opinion, and has spurred Cabot to argue that
his testimony as an expert was inappropriate and should be disregarded as the
expert himself admitted to speculation.
Nevertheless, when considered against the other evidence in the case, and
the very limited nature of the plaintiffs’ remaining claims, and giving his testimony
regarding the loss of well bore integrity every benefit of the doubt, the Court
cautiously concludes that Dr. Ingraffea, to some minimum degree, did testify
regarding problems with the defendants’ drilling and cementing of the wells that
may have had some relevance to the plaintiffs’ case. Therefore, the Court is
unwilling to find that the problems with his testimony, to the extent they occurred,
require that the Court enter judgment in Cabot’s favor as a matter of law.
27
However, as will be discussed later, the weakness in his testimony contributes
substantially to the Court’s finding that a new trial is necessary because the verdict
was contrary to the great weight of the evidence that was presented.
4.
Judgment as a Matter of Law is Not Warranted
In summary, the Court finds that the plaintiffs’ evidence offered in support
of their narrow claims was extremely limited. Nevertheless, the Court finds that
aggregating the testimony from the plaintiffs themselves, the testimony of their
expert witnesses in spite of its shortcomings, and the testimony of third-party
witnesses including Mr. O’Donnell and the plaintiffs’ neighbors Erik Roos and
Victoria Switzer, may provide sufficient evidence that could have permitted a
reasonable jury to find by a preponderance of the evidence that Cabot’s activity
had been negligent and that it contributed to the plaintiffs’ interference with the use
of their water and enjoyment of their property. When considering this evidence
against the strict standards that govern motions for judgment as a matter of law
under Rule 50, the Court does not find that Cabot has demonstrated that it is
entitled to have judgment entered in its favor as a matter of law.
However, we also find manifest weaknesses in this evidence, and observe
that this evidence even when it is construed in a light most favorable to the
plaintiffs supports a basis of liability which is starkly at odds with the claims
pursued by the plaintiffs at trial. The material weaknesses and variances in this
28
proof, when it is coupled with the manifold instances of improper conduct at trial,
and repeated testimony and argument by counsel that was prejudicial to Cabot,
require a new trial. The Court further finds that the evidence at trial was bereft of
any information that could have allowed the jury to calculate a multi-million dollar
award, thus providing further reason why the jury’s verdict as to both liability and
damages must be vacated, and a new trial ordered.
B.
Motion for a New Trial Pursuant to Rule 59
1.
Standard of Review
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(a) provides, in relevant part:
A new trial may be granted as to all or any of the parties
and on all or part of the issues in an action in which there
has been a trial by jury, for any of the reasons for which
new trials have heretofore been granted in actions at law
in the courts of the United States.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(a). The decision to grant or deny a new trial is committed to the
sound discretion of the trial court and, unlike the standard used for determining
judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50, the court need not view the evidence in
the light most favorable to the verdict winner. See Allied Chem. Corp. v. Daiflon,
Inc., 449 U.S. 33, 36 (1980); Leonard v. Stemtech Int’l Inc., 834 F.3d 376, 386 (3d
Cir. 2016) (citing Olefins Trading, Inc. v. Han Yang Chem. Corp., 9 F.3d 282 (3d
Cir. 1993)); see also 9A Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2531
29
(2d ed. 1994) (“On a motion for new trial the court may consider the credibility of
witnesses and the weight of the evidence.”).
Common reasons given for granting a new trial include “(1) the jury’s
verdict is against the clear weight of the evidence, and a new trial must granted to
prevent a miscarriage of justice; (2) newly-discovered evidence exists that would
likely alter the outcome of the trial; (3) improper conduct by an attorney or the
court unfairly influenced the verdict; or (4) the jury’s verdict was facially
inconsistent.” Amgen Inc. v. Sanofi, -- F. Supp. 3d -- , 2017 WL 27253, at *3 (D.
Del. Jan. 3, 2017) (citing Zarow-Smith v. N.J. Transit Rail Operations, 953 F.
Supp. 581, 584-85 (D.N.J. 1997)). Recently, another court in the Middle District
of Pennsylvania observed that courts have granted new trials where, inter alia, the
verdict was against the weight of the evidence, the size of the verdict was against
the weight of the evidence, and where counsel engaged in improper conduct that
had a prejudicial effect on the jury. See Borrell v. Bloomsburg Univ., -- F. Supp.
3d --, 2016 WL 4988061, at *3 (M.D. Pa. Sept. 19, 2016); see also Todd v.
Luzerne Cnty. Children & Youth Servs., No. 04-2637, 2011 WL 841429, at *2
(M.D. Pa. Mar. 8, 2011). A new trial may also be warranted where there has been
a “showing that the jury verdict resulted from passion or prejudice.” Evans v. Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey, 273 F.3d 346, 352 (3d Cir. 2001).
30
In considering a motion for a new trial, a court should proceed with caution
and remain “mindful that it should not simply substitute its own judgment of the
facts and the credibility of the witnesses for those of the jury. Rather, the court
should grant a new trial ‘only when the great weight of the evidence cuts against
the verdict and a miscarriage of justice would result if the verdict were to stand.’”
Id. (quoting Leonard, 834 F.3d at 386); see also Springer v. Henry, 435 F.3d 268,
274 (3d Cir. 2006); Williamson v. Consol. Rail Corp., 926 F.2d 1344, 1352-53 (3d
Cir. 1991). “[W]here the evidence is in conflict, and subject to two or more
interpretations, the trial judge should be more reluctant to grant a new trial.” Klein
v. Hollings, 992 F.2d 1285, 1295 (3d Cir. 1993) (citation omitted). “This limit
upon the district court’s power to grant a new trial seeks to ensure that a district
court does not substitute its judgment of the facts and the credibility of the
witnesses for that of the jury.” Delli Santi v. CNA Ins. Cos., 88 F.3d 192, 201 (3d
Cir. 1996) (quoting Fineman v. Armstrong World Indus., Inc., 980 F.2d 171, 211
(3d Cir. 1992)). Accordingly, the Third Circuit has instructed that “a District
Court reviewing a jury verdict has an ‘obligation . . . to uphold the jury’s award if
there exists a reasonable basis to do so.” Evans, 273 F.3d at 351-52 (quoting
Motter v. Everest & Jennings, Inc., 883 F.2d 1223, 1230 (3d Cir. 1989)).
31
2.
The Verdict Was Against the Weight of the Evidence
As an initial matter, despite the plaintiffs’ persistent efforts to distance
themselves from or disavow their binding stipulation, the evidence demonstrated
convincingly that the plaintiffs’ problems with their water were witnessed by all of
them before Cabot had begun drilling the first of the Gesford wells. The plaintiffs
all acknowledged that they experienced problems with the water in their wells at
least a month before Cabot started to drill on the Gesford pads. This manifest
problem of “cause and effect” was never adequately explained by the plaintiffs,
who time and again either evaded this issue, attempted to impeach their own
stipulation, or endeavored to provide some alternative explanation for their own
prior representations. Eventually, however, the plaintiffs’ case was confined and
hobbled by their own statements and testimony which showed that some of the
very problems that they claim Cabot caused by its drilling activity occurred before
Cabot broke ground on either well. While the plaintiffs provided some scant
evidence that could suggest that problems with their water worsened after drilling
began in earnest, but this evidence was extraordinarily limited and vague. In any
event, even if the plaintiffs arguably provided this limited testimony that could
have caused one to infer that the drilling activity worsened the plaintiffs’ water
contamination they did not proceed on this theory at trial, and thus created
profound confusion regarding the nature of their claims.
32
Moreover, this evidence was overwhelmed by other testimony and evidence.
Given the scientific nature of the plaintiffs’ claims, the plaintiffs necessarily relied
upon expert testimony to explain how the defendants were negligent in their
drilling operations, and how that negligence could have caused contaminants to
flow beneath the earth’s surface to the plaintiffs’ nearby water wells. Yet, the
plaintiffs’ expert witnesses offered opinion testimony that came perilously close
speculation and at best were inferences that had weak factual support.
And even if there were a minimum quantity of evidence that could have
allowed the jury to reach its finding regarding Cabot’s negligence, and a causal
relationship between that negligence and the alleged contamination of the
plaintiffs’ water, the plaintiffs provided essentially no testimony or other evidence
that could have allowed a jury to make a rational calculation of damages that they
sustained.
In short, on the issues of causation and damages the plaintiffs’
presentation left the jury largely at sea, invited appeals to sympathy and
speculation, and provided us with few principled ways to explain or justify a
damages award of $4.24 million for the nuisance and interference with the
plaintiffs’ use and enjoyment of their property.
a.
Cause and Effect
In 2009, Nolen Ely wrote a note that was potentially devastating to the
claims that remain in this case. In that note, Mr. Ely indicated that problems with
33
his family’s well water were noticeable in the summer of 2008. (Cabot Ex. 96.)
At trial he testified repeatedly that these problems began in August 2008. (N.T.
2/23 126:20-127:13, 191:15-191:2, 210:21-212:10.) On cross-examination, Mr.
Ely explained that “what we’ve been trying to convey” is that he and the other
plaintiffs “began noticing issues with our water in August 2008.” (N.T. 2/23
212:3-10.) As the Court noted previously, each of the adult plaintiffs in this case
testified at trial that their water began experiencing problems that summer, and in
any event prior to September 25, 2008 – the date that the plaintiffs’ agreed is the
date on which Cabot started to drill the two wells that are claimed to have caused
damage to the plaintiffs’ property. Moreover, Dr. Ingraffea testified that the gas
that impacted the plaintiffs’ water wells came from a depth of 1500’ – something
that did not happen until November 12 or 13, 2008, during the drilling of the
Gesford 3S well. (N.T. 3/1 40:25-41:12.) Paul Rubin’s spare testimony regarding
the faults and fracturing in the region that allowed gas to flow into aquifers that
contaminated the plaintiffs’ wells made clear that he believed the cause of the
alleged changes in the plaintiffs’ water came from the drilling of the wells. (N.T.
2/29 49:1-7, 213:19-23.)
Although the Court construed the evidence in the light most beneficial to the
plaintiffs, and concluded that there might have been some testimony that could
have allowed a jury to infer that the drilling activity was a contributory factor
34
which exacerbated the already recognized issues, given that the uncontradicted
evidence showed that the initial impact to the plaintiffs’ water begin before the
alleged cause, it is hard to explain from the evidence at trial how Cabot’s drilling –
even if negligent – could be deemed the sole or exclusive cause of the plaintiffs
nuisance and interfered with their use and enjoyment of property. In sum the
problems with the proof in this case are extensive, and were compounded by the
manner in which this proof was presented. The Court focuses on some of the most
glaring of these problems to explain further why a new trial is necessary based
upon the weight of the evidence alone.
b.
Weakness in Rubin’s Testimony
Even before trial, when the Court substantially curtailed the scope of Mr.
Rubin’s testimony in its Daubert opinion, the Court noted the inescapable
conclusion that “much of Mr. Rubin’s proffered testimony is long on conjecture
and speculation and short on testing and analysis.” (Doc. 696, p. 38.) In so ruling,
the Court found that Rubin “has insufficient basis to render an opinion regarding
the actual migration of groundwater from Cabot’s wells to the plaintiffs’ aquifers”
and, therefore, precluded him from testifying at trial about “the existence of any
specific pathways between Cabot’s wells and the plaintiffs’ water supplies for the
simple reason that he did not do any testing that could confirm such a subsurface
connection.” (Id., p. 36.) At trial, Rubin conceded on cross that he had not done
35
any testing or other analysis that could have permitted him to opine to a reasonable
degree of scientific certainty that there was a specific joint, set, fault or fracture
through which any chemical or substance could travel to the plaintiffs’ two wells.
(N.T. 2/25 166:16-24.) Instead, Rubin could only say he made some observations
of geological faulting by visiting a quarry more than half a mile from the plaintiffs’
wells. (N.T. 2/25 148:11-12, 158:3-5.) Rubin admitted that he did not know
exactly which way the faults traveled, and his speculative opinion that the faults
could have extended to the plaintiffs’ property was weakened by the fact that he
had never personally seen a fault extend more than 2,000 feet, and because he did
not ever examine the geology on the plaintiffs’ property. (N.T. 2/25 182:12-15,
153:8-9, 171:5-13.) Lastly, Rubin never performed any testing of the Huberts’
water, which causes his opinion to be especially limited with respect to their
claims.
(N.T. 2/25 131:7-9, 131:19-132:1, 169:3-24, 172:24-173:8.)
Any
probative value of Mr. Rubin’s testimony was limited – both by his own admission
and by the limitations that had been placed on his area of expertise – to general
observations regarding the geological features in the area that may be relevant to
underground migration of water.
The limited, general and highly inferential testimony offered by Mr. Rubin
was sharply contrasted with that offered by Dr. Tarek Saba, who opined based
upon substantial scientific testimony that no pathway from a single source
36
impacting the plaintiffs’ wells, and because the Ely and Hubert wells were not in
communication with one another based upon information gleaned from chemical
analysis of those wells.
(N.T. 3/3 202:21-203:16, 203:23-204:18.)
Thus, in
contrast to Rubin’s acknowledgment that he had not identified any one pathway
between the Gesford pad and the wells, Dr. Saba testified without contradiction
that no pathway even existed. (N.T. 3/3 204:16-18.)
The stark contrast between the testimony of these experts on this single issue
– let alone Dr. Saba’s extensive testimony regarding the chemical composition of
the plaintiffs’ water wells, and the geological features that could have impacted
water flow to those wells, severely undermines the Court’s confidence in this proof
as support for the conclusion reached by the jury.
c.
Weakness in Ingraffea’s Testimony
Dr. Ingraffea’s opinion, though less limited in scope than Rubin’s, also
suffered from some glaring weaknesses, chief among them that some aspects of it
were simply speculative – and Dr. Ingraffea admitted as much. Dr. Ingraffea’s
theory of how the plaintiffs’ water wells were impacted was that gas was coming
from activities initiated on the 3S well by it going through the 1,500 foot gas show
– then moving over to the Gesford 3/9DD well bore, and somehow migrating up
that well bore before entering an aquifer that took it to the plaintiffs’ wells. This
theory is difficult enough to believe on its own, but especially so when considered
37
against evidence which strongly suggested these water wells were not fed by a
single source, and were not even connected to one another. (N.T. 2/29 216:6-14,
218:1-7, 219:2-6.) Dr. Ingraffea conceded that this multi-part theory was based
substantially upon speculation, and that he had no proof to support it. (N.T. 2/29
227:2-4, 230:14-21.)
Dr. Ingraffea’s testimony was also glaringly limited with respect to
causation because he was not qualified to testify about hydrology or hydrogeology,
and he acknowledged that it would take an expert in these fields to explain the flow
of gas into a water supply:
I can explain why a defective well might cause
previously ensconced hydrocarbon fluids to be available
for flow in an underground aquifer.
It is the
hydrologist’s job to then determine whether underground
flow of that aquifer in space and time could explain how
these now liberated fluids could get into the water supply
at the point of the water wells. That’s the picture. It
takes team work to do this.
(N.T. 2/29 57:3-11.) In other words, Dr. Ingraffea’s testimony relied upon the
testimony of another expert – presumably Paul Rubin – to connect his theory of
negligence to the alleged contamination of the plaintiffs’ wells.
As noted,
however, the evidence on this score was badly deficient, and thus further renders
Dr. Ingraffea’s testimony to be of marginal value. There was simply an analytical
gap between the opinions offered by these experts that the plaintiffs never fully
connected at trial. Instead, the plaintiff’s theory of their case left the jury to
38
speculate regarding a possible connection between allegedly negligent drilling
activity at the Gesford pads, the resultant flow of hydrocarbons through the earth
as a result of that drilling into unidentified underground pathways, and the delivery
of those hydrocarbons along those pathways as contaminants to the plaintiffs’
water supplies.
d.
Lack of Evidence that the Plaintiffs’ Water Was
Contaminated by the Gesford Wells
Setting aside the problems that afflicted the plaintiffs’ own proof of
negligence and causation, Cabot presented uncontradicted evidence that
undermined the plaintiffs’ very theory of liability in this case, and demonstrated
that no pathway existed between the plaintiffs’ wells – and that the chemical
makeup of these wells were distinct from one another. The plaintiffs had no
explanation for this scientific evidence, which undermined their suggestion that
Cabot’s drilling at the Gesford site was the sole source of the contamination
experienced at both of the plaintiffs’ wells..
Dr. Saba testified, without contradiction by any other witness, that there
were material differences in the chemical makeup and constituents in the plaintiffs’
water wells. (N.T. 3/3 203:17-204:18; N.T. 3/4 129:17-23, 176:22-25; Cabot Trial
Ex. 237 (demonstrative).) As Dr. Saba explained, the differences in chemical
composition means, scientifically, “there is no pathway from a single source.”
(N.T. 3/4 176:14-21.) Dr. Saba testified that if methane had, in fact, migrated from
39
the Gesford wells to the plaintiffs’ water supplies, the isotopic makeup of the
methane in each water supply would have been consistent. (N.T. 3/4 168:6-9.) Dr.
Saba testified that they were not, and the plaintiffs had no answer in response.5
Although the plaintiffs did provide evidence showing that their water was similarly
turbid and cloudy, and they had methane in their water at levels that the DEP for
some time considered to be dangerous, the record does not sufficiently demonstrate
that Cabot’s drilling at the Gesford wells – even if done negligently – was the
source of any contamination.
e.
Cabot’s Evidence Regarding a Lack of Causation and
Negligence was Substantial
Dr. Saba testified at length regarding his detailed testing of the gases found
in the plaintiffs’ water wells and concluded to a reasonable degree of scientific
certainty that it did not match the gas at the 1500’ level that Dr. Ingraffea stated
was impacting the plaintiffs’ water supply.
(N.T. 3/3 133:12-135:17, 137:6-
141:16, 142:4-143:2, 212:3-217:5, N.T. 3/4 168:10-169:8.) The plaintiffs offered
essentially no rejoinder to this scientific testimony that discredited the plaintiffs’
experts’ own theory regarding causation.
Other evidence showed that outcrops existing on the plaintiffs’ property
were high in both iron and manganese, and Dr. Saba explained why the water there
As noted, Mr. Rubin did no testing of the Hubert well at all, and thus would have
been incapable of offering any meaningful testimony to rebut Dr. Saba on this
score.
40
5
contained high levels of each of these elements. (N.T. 3/3 152:2-153:1, 161:5162:23.) Dr. Saba also explained to the jury that water in this part of Pennsylvania
has historically contained high levels of methane, iron, sulfur and other
constituents, which further explained their presence in the plaintiffs’ water. (N.T.
3/3 163:23-169:11, 171:7-174:19, 186:11-22.) Cabot presented evidence from
local residents who testified that water in the area had long been bubbly and had a
distinctive odor going back decades, (N.T. 3/7 34:14-35:16), and evidence showed
that Mr. Ely himself had been able to light his water on fire even before gas
drilling operations commenced in the area, (N.T. 3/3 170:14-171:6).
Dr. Saba also testified that the constituents found in the plaintiffs’ water
supplies are within background limits, with the exception of the results that Rubin
had identified, which Dr. Saba criticized for not having been stabilized prior to
sampling, hence making them unreliable outliers.
(N.T. 3/3 205:13-206:23.)
Indeed, Dr. Saba noted that Mr. Ely had found that gas was present in his water
well at levels exceeding 28 milligrams per liter before Cabot broke ground on
either of the Gesford wells. (N.T. 3/3 206:24-209:25.)
In contrast to the extremely limited testing done by Mr. Rubin, Dr. Saba’s
research of historical data and testing of the plaintiffs’ two distinct wells led him to
opine to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty that “plaintiffs’ water wells
contain certain naturally occurring compounds” that are “consistent with
41
background, ground water condition” and therefore that the wells “are not
impacted by gas operations.” (N.T. 3/3 145:10-146:1.) Although the jury was not
compelled to credit all of Dr. Saba’s testimony, when considered against the
paucity of evidence that the plaintiffs offered to prove their claims regarding
contamination, which was itself based largely on irregular testing and conjecture,
the Court is constrained to find that to the extent that it reflects a finding that Cabot
was the sole source of any injury to the plaintiffs the jury’s verdict was against the
weight of the evidence.
Likewise, Cabot presented substantial testimony in response to Dr.
Ingraffea’s admittedly speculative opinion regarding the manner in which Cabot’s
drilling activities were negligent and permitted the migration of hydrocarbons in a
way that later reached the plaintiffs’ wells – something Dr. Saba testified did not
happen. Dr. L. Brun Hilbert testified that (1) “no materials, liquid, fluid or gas
escaped from the well bores and caused any contamination to the plaintiffs’ water
wells,” (2) [t]he wells did not leak into the subsurface environment, nor are they
leaking into the subsurface environment now,” and (3) when the wells were
plugged, they were plugged according to the best industry practices . . . and in
accordance with the required regulations of Pennsylvania.” (N.T. 3/7 92:22-93:5.)
In reaching his conclusions, Dr. Hilbert testified that he had relied upon his review
of well histories, morning reports, invoices, sketches, and other documents that
42
exist in the well files, whereas Dr. Ingraffea testified that his admittedly
speculative opinion was drawn from the well histories alone. (Compare N.T. 3/7
87:7-88:23 with N.T. 3/1 91:7-12.)
As in the marked contrast between the
hydrogeological testimony offered by Mr. Rubin and Dr. Saba, there was a
substantial contrast in the testimony offered by Drs. Hilbert and Ingraffea, and
particularly on the depth of information that each expert relied upon in offering
their respective opinions.
As with the evidence on causation, the plaintiff’s
evidence regarding Cabot’s allegedly negligent drilling activity was weak and
lacked rigor in comparison with that offered by Dr. Hilbert in response.
2.
Missteps and Irregularity in the Presentation at Trial and
Closing Argument Were So Extensive and Prejudicial as to
Compel a New Trial
While we have found that the jury’s verdict was against the weight of the
evidence, we note that the missteps of plaintiffs’ counsel, which occurred on
multiple occasions throughout the trial and in the presence of the jury, and
particularly during closing argument, risked stoking juror prejudice and confusion
and, in our view materially contributed to the jury’s confusion. Therefore, this trial
conduct regrettably provides further reasons why a new trial in this case is
required.
Earlier in this memorandum, the Court noted that this case was initially
brought by 44 plaintiffs asserting multiple legal claims against Cabot, alleging a
43
variety of legal theories in a broadside attack on Cabot’s oil and gas drilling
activities. This action was, over the course of litigation and rulings by the Court,
and as the result of settlement agreements, narrowed substantially on the eve of
trial to consist only of the Elys’ claims of negligence and nuisance, and the
Huberts’ claims of nuisance. The litigation thus became much more focused, and
required that the plaintiffs approach the remaining claims in a similarly focused
manner. Despite our repeated admonitions, sadly this did not happen.
Instead, on the eve of trial the plaintiffs endeavored to augment their exhibit
list from the 24 that were originally identified to 351 – many of which had never
even been produced in the litigation. The plaintiffs’ efforts in this regard, which
were unsuccessful, foreshadowed that they were unwilling to accept the way in
which their claims had been pared back throughout this litigation, and more
troublingly hinted at an unwillingness to confine their evidence and approach to
trial that focused exclusively on these remaining claims.
The Court recognizes the difficulty that the plaintiffs faced in presenting a
case that had been so narrowed, particularly given the broader litigative and
administrative context from which the case came to trial. The testimony that could
permissibly have been elicited from witnesses, and later made the subject of
argument, was itself strictly limited by the Court’s in limine rulings, particularly
with respect to prior settlement agreements or DEP action. These limitations were
44
compelled by the rules of evidence.
Yet, plaintiffs’ counsel on a number of
occasions failed to abide by these express limitations. Instead, what can fairly be
described as a scattered and inattentive approach to these rulings signaled a kind of
myopia on the plaintiffs’ part regarding the limited issues that remained to be tried,
and the kinds of proof that they could present to a jury in support of those claims.
This inability to reconcile the case as they imagined it to be with the actual case as
borne out by the law and facts also likely contributed to repeated missteps during
trial with respect to the plaintiffs’ presentation of their case, and in counsel’s
summation in front of the jury.
During trial, the plaintiffs, their witnesses and counsel continually strayed
into forbidden territory by repeatedly hinting at evidence that had been excluded
from the jury’s consideration, or by resorting to unorthodox questioning and
argument from counsel at all stages of the case. This inappropriate conduct marred
the trial from opening to close, and impelled the Court repeatedly to conduct
sidebars with the parties – 40 in total, lasting more than three and a half hours,
often at the request of Cabot’s counsel – and, unfortunately, to admonish and
reprimand plaintiffs’ counsel in the jury’s presence even during closing argument.6
The Court emphasized for counsel, and was constrained to emphasize in front of
the jury on more than one occasion, that it sought to conduct these types of
discussions at sidebar and outside the jury’s hearing. Unfortunately, this was not
possible at times during the trial, and at closing, and the Court was compelled to
admonish counsel when her questioning or argument contravened the Court’s
45
6
This intervention by the Court was forced even after counsel had specifically been
put on notice that her summation at closing was inviting speculation, was
improperly vouching for witness credibility, was implying the existence of
settlement agreements that had been excluded from evidence, and was making
mention of legal rulings made by the Court, including to suggest – wrongly – that
the Court had made a prima facie finding of negligence in the case.7 (N.T. 3/9
38:17-49:11.) In reviewing the record, the Court is left with the firm impression
that this conduct was inappropriate and likely influenced the jury’s verdict. Hence,
a new trial is warranted.
explicit instructions. (N.T. 3/8 37:24-40:5 (during examination of Hilbert); N.T.
3/9 88:22-89:5 (closing argument).)
7 The Court identified these problems for plaintiffs’ during a sidebar following her
closing argument, and prior to Cabot’s closing and the plaintiff’s rebuttal. In fact,
after the Court took the pains to identify for counsel these four areas where she had
improperly tread, and where she was to go no further, the Court informed her that
the improper closing “could undermine any verdict that [the plaintiffs’] receive.”
(N.T. 3/9 38:17-20.) Unfortunately, the message did not get through, and during
the plaintiffs’ rebuttal argument she almost immediately began referring to
methane, toxicological matters and EPA testing that were no longer a part of the
case. The Court was constrained to interrupt counsel once again to advise her and
the jury that “this is not about toxic chemicals. That is something that all of the
parties have told this jury. This case is about alleged interference with the use and
enjoyment of property. That is the only claim before this jury and that is the only
claim in this case. And Ms. Lewis’s remarks, which regrettably go to an area that
is not in the case, must be disregarded by the jury.” (N.T. 3/9 89:5-10.) Plaintiffs’
counsel’s failure to stay within the narrow bounds of the case and the Court’s
rulings risked confusing the jury and making it appear that they were not hearing
the full story, something that was plainly to Cabot’s detriment, and was
compounded by counsel’s insinuation at other times earlier in the case that Cabot
had destroyed evidence, something that the Court had to strike from the record.
(N.T. 3/1 215:1-216:25.)
46
Where, as here, the moving party objected to asserted inappropriate conduct
by counsel at trial and later argues that the conduct warrants a new trial, a court
must determine (1) whether counsel’s conduct was improper and (2) whether it
was reasonably probable that the improper conduct influenced the jury’s verdict.
Fineman v. Armstrong World Indus., Inc., 980 F.2d 171, 207 (3d Cir. 1992);
Blanche Rd. Corp. v. Bensalem Twp., 57 F.3d 253, 264 (3d Cir. 1995) (abrogated
on other grounds by United Artists Theatre Circuit, Inc. v. Twp. of Warrington,
316 F.3d 392 (3d Cir. 2003)); Greate Bay Hotel & Casino v. Tose, 34 F.3d 1227,
1236 (3d Cir. 1994); see also Young v. Pleasant Valley Sch. Dist., No. 3:07-CV00854, 2012 WL 1827194, at *27 (M.D. Pa. May 18, 2012) (granting new trial due
to counsel’s prejudicial conduct at trial), aff’d 601 F. App’x 132, 136 (3d Cir.
2015).
Cases where new trials have been granted based on counsel’s errors typically
involve challenged conduct that was pervasive at trial. See, e.g., Blanche Rd., 57
F.3d at 264 (affirming grant of a new trial where “counsel for Plaintiffs pursued a
pattern of misconduct from opening statement through final argument” and where
“the record [was] replete with examples of counsel misconduct that might have
influenced the jury”); Fineman, 980 F.2d at 206-07 (affirming new trial based on
pervasive misconduct); cf. Draper v. Airco Inc., 580 F.2d 91, 96-97 (3d Cir. 1978)
(reversing district court’s decision against granting a new trial, noting “Where . . .
47
a closing address to the jury contains such numerous and serious violations of so
many rules of proper argument as occurred here, we must conclude that it is more
reasonably probable that the verdict was influenced by the prejudicial
misstatements.”).
Guided by these standards, the Court turns to the record of the trial in order
to provide an overview of some of the missteps of counsel that lead the Court to
find that this inappropriate conduct, including questioning and argument, likely
influenced the jury’s verdict and now compels that a new trial be ordered.
We begin at the trial’s end, during the plaintiffs’ closing argument, shortly
before the jury was to retire to deliberate, since that argument encapsulates so
much of what was ultimately prejudicial to Cabot. First, rather than to summarize
the facts in evidence, counsel persisted in referring to matters that not only were
not in evidence, but were specifically excluded from evidence by the Court’s
pretrial in limine rulings, particularly with respect to out-of-court settlements and
administrative proceedings involving the DEP. For example, counsel improperly
referred to the DEP’s investigation into Dimock water issues, and later consent
agreement with Cabot – both of which were excluded from trial in this case – in
her closing argument, indicating on multiple instances that Cabot had been
required to provide water to the plaintiffs and had not done so out of “charity” but
instead because of a “requirement” imposed by the DEP. (N.T. 3/9 25:9-26:12.)
48
Perhaps owing to her familiarity with factual issues that were outside the
bounds of this case, counsel would frequently refer to matters that had never been
presented in front of the jury, thereby inviting speculation about facts not in
evidence. This happened regularly. (N.T. 3/9 44:11-45:5) (testifying about a
subcontractor’s investigation into spills and leaks around the Gesford pads); N.T.
3/9 39:1-5 (referring to a still photo of “bubbling” offered for demonstrative
purposes only, inviting speculation into facts not in evidence); N.T. 3/9 31:11-13
(commenting on an alleged drop in natural gas prices, not in evidence); N.T. 3/9
29:21-30:2 (informing the jury that the majority of Cabot’s wells were drilled in
Susquehanna County, inviting speculation). This routine pattern of referring to
matters outside of evidence, and especially about matters that were absolutely
prohibited from being introduced into the case, was prejudicial. See Fineman, 980
F.2d at 207-11 (attorney misconduct warranted new trial where counsel referred to
“extrinsic evidence”); Blanche Rd., 57 F.3d at 264 (holding new trial warranted
where counsel referred to documents that had not been introduced).
Counsel’s tendency to diverge from the record that had actually been made
was especially problematic because it caused Cabot to object not only throughout
trial but also during closing argument. By forcing Cabot into the dilemma of
choosing between an objection to improper testimony, or foregoing an objection,
and allowing the introduction of excluded evidence, plaintiff’s persistent refusal to
49
follow our orders and instructions created a wholly misleading impression for the
jury. It suggested to the jury to speculate that they were not receiving the whole
story and that evidence was being improperly withheld from them.
Whether
intentional or inadvertent, the impression created by this course of action was both
wrong and unfairly prejudicial.
In fact, this would be an issue that arose
specifically during closing as well. Counsel said on multiple occasions that she
would not “go beyond that,” or offering a statement regarding constituents in the
plaintiffs’ water before saying “but I won’t go into that,” or hinting that the
plaintiffs were being pressured to settle their cases but that she was “not saying
how, I’m not getting into any details. I’m not implying anything, other than it has
–” before this commentary was cut off by the Court. (N.T. 3/9 26:18-27:12; N.T.
3/9 40:1-6; N.T. 3/9 22-36:13.)
In addition to arguing about matters not in evidence and those that had been
specifically excluded from the case, and implying that Cabot or the Court were
preventing the jury from hearing all of the relevant evidence, plaintiffs’ counsel
also took the unfortunate step of vouching for her witness’ credibility. In the
context of the numerous irregularities in this case, this was also error, and further
compels us to set aside the verdict.
It is a cardinal rule under the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct
that “[a] lawyer shall not . . . when appearing before a tribunal, assert the lawyer’s
50
personal opinion as to the justness of a cause, as to the credibility of a witness, [or]
as to the culpability of a civil litigant.” Pa. R. Prof. Conduct 3.4. Aside from the
basic matter of conduct, the Third Circuit has held on several occasions that
counsel’s vouching for client testimony at trial may be a factor that warrants a new
trial. See, e.g., Blanche Rd., 57 F.3d at 264 (new trial warranted on several
grounds, including fact that counsel commented that his client had testified
“honestly” on cross-examination); Draper, 580 F.2d at 95 (ordering a new trial in
case where counsel had attested for the “justness of his client’s cause”); see also
Fineman, 980 F.2d at 206-07.
In this case, counsel told the jury that her clients had testified honestly and
vouched for the justness of their cause in ways that went past that permissible
during a closing. For example, counsel told the jury, “I purport to you, as you look
at them, and again, this is about demeanor, they were telling the truth.” (N.T. 3/9
34:4-8.) She advised the jury that “the only credible, truthful, entirely truthful
testimony that has been presented here in this courtroom has been from the
witnesses put on the stand during the plaintiffs’ case.”
(N.T. 3/9 33:5-10.)
Regarding the plaintiffs’ neighbors who testified, counsel told the jury, “Those two
folks testified I believe in a highly credible fashion.” (N.T. 3/9 34:1-35:3.) About
Dr. Ingraffea, the jury was told that he was an “obviously honest man . . . . Dr.
Ingraffea was so honest . . . .” (N.T. 3/9 37:16-38:3.) Regarding Erik Roos and
51
Victoria Switzer, they were held out as “impeccable witnesses, truth-telling
witnesses, people who are in obvious distress.” (N.T. 3/9 42:7-43:4.) The Court
recognizes that it is the advocate’s art to argue before a jury in order to persuade
them regarding the credibility of particular witnesses, but this vouching was
excessive, particularly during a closing that was riddled with other problems.
During the closing, plaintiffs’ counsel also erred by suggesting to the jury
that the Court had made certain legal rulings or findings with respect to Cabot’s
negligence, risking the jury being led to believe that the Court had already in some
manner found for the plaintiffs:
Before I was able to stand here before you today I had to
make – we, plaintiffs, I speak for them – had to make a
prima – what’s called a prima facie showing of enough
evidence to allow me to speak to you. That’s legalese, I
have a right to be here with my plaintiffs to ask for your
consideration of their situation and hopefully a
unanimous verdict that will allow them to put to rest
something that has been going on way to loo long. And
that is the difficulties of filing a lawsuit and standing
behind a lawsuit for six years. Under great odds, great
difficulty. So, there is a predicate for the plaintiffs being
here, a legal predicate.
(N.T. 3/9 21:25-22:11.) The Court specifically addressed this matter with counsel
prior to the defendant’s closing, noting it was one of several irregularities with her
argument that risked placing in jeopardy any verdict her clients might receive, and
instructing her to refrain from further similar comments on rebuttal.
52
During the questioning of witnesses, counsel also improperly referred to
matters that were excluded from trial on the basis of in limine rulings, thus further
risking confusing the jury, and creating the impression that they were not being
told all the facts, and that Cabot had something to hide. This occurred when
questioning Cabot employees like Philip Stalnaker whether there were reasons
“other than a business decision” why Cabot would decide to plug the Gesford
wells, something that risked getting into matters that had been covered by in limine
rulings, including Cabot’s out-of-court COSA with the DEP, something the Court
at the time told counsel “creat[ed] an unfair implication that there is something else
at play that I have excluded from evidence, and that would be, I think, an unfair
implication to leave with the jury.” (N.T. 3/1 179:2-182:7.) Yet this happened on
numerous occasions, to Cabot’s prejudice.
For example, in an argumentative
exchange with Dr. Hilbert, plaintiffs’ counsel asked him whether he would
acknowledge that the “DEP is not in concurrence with your opinions in this case?
You do accept that?” (N.T. 3/7 197:9-202:25.) This, too, led to a sidebar where
the Court expressed its concern that counsel was again tiptoeing around the issue
of matters that had been excluded by pretrial rulings. After hearing from counsel,
the Court made clear that her questioning was problematic: “I do think that
certainly your question regarding DEP disagreeing with his findings – it seems to
go directly into the area that I thought I had precluded as a matter of law after
53
briefing and argument by the parties. I do think if you’re going to trot into those
areas again you need to come up to sidebar first. We have done this repeatedly
throughout these proceedings, and it is not fair to this jury. And it is not the way to
proceed.” (Id.) This came towards the end of trial, after numerous other similar
issues had arisen with testimony from the plaintiffs’ witnesses, which seemed to
invite speculation regarding matters that were excluded from trial, including the
administrative proceedings.8 This trespass into areas that had been excluded risked
confusing the jury, was prejudicial to Cabot, and undermines confidence in the
jury’s verdict.
Regardless of whether counsel’s conduct was willful or unintentional each
of these episodes was inappropriate and plainly prejudicial. Taken together the
aggregate prejudicial impact of counsel’s missteps, in combination with the
manifest weakness of the evidence, lead us to conclude that a new trial is required.
Fineman, 980 F.2d at 207. The Court appreciates that plaintiffs’ counsel has
characterized some of these instances as “innocent misstep[s] or “unintentional
Notably, the Court raised this issue at the outset of the case, and flatly instructed
counsel for both sides that the case would not involve relitgation of prior
administrative proceedings: “Cases inspire great passions, and this case is no
exception. But those great passions must be bound, confined and bridled by the
rulings of this Court. And so I commend that advice and that observation to
everyone as we commence what I expect to be a well-tried and hard-fought trial,
that all parties must abide by the prior rulings of this Court, in particular with
respect to matters such as references to administrative actions that may or may not
have been taken, settlement of other litigation that had been pending. Such matters
I’ve ruled upon are not part of this case.” (N.T. 2/23 9:2-11.)
54
8
‘slips’” that were brought out by the complexity of trial. (Pl. Opp. At p. 6, 119
n.25, 122, 124, 129, 134, 151.) However, some of the “missteps” happened with
such frequency, even after counsel had specifically been admonished, that they
compel us to the conclude that plaintiffs’ counsel fell into precisely the snare of
their own making which we urged them to avoid by indulging in conduct which:
“could undermine any verdict that [the plaintiffs’] receive.” (N.T. 3/9 38:17-20.)
Sadly, our warnings were not heeded, and the seeds sown by this trial
conduct now bear a bitter fruit for the plaintiffs. Therefore, the Court finds that
although counsel may have been seeking to deliver zealous advocacy on behalf of
clients she has known for years regarding a matter that holds deep meaning for her
personally, the aggregation of the instances of inappropriate conduct throughout
the trial cannot be allowed to stand where the Court finds it very likely that they
influenced the jury’s verdict in this case.
3.
There Was Insufficient Evidence to Support the Jury’s
Award of over $4 million in Damages for Private Nuisance
Claims
As the Court has frequently noted throughout this opinion, one theme
running through this case continued at trial: it became narrower. Thus, at the
conclusion of the plaintiff’s case-in-chief, the Court was constrained to grant
Cabot’s motion for entry of judgment in its favor with respect to the Elys’
negligence claims, finding that the plaintiffs lacked evidence to support this claim.
55
This left the Elys and Huberts with claims that Cabot’s drilling activities interfered
with their access to water and created a private nuisance. This further reduction in
the scope of the plaintiffs’ claims was apparently not fully appreciated by the jury,
which after finding in favor of the plaintiffs’ on the remaining nuisance claim,
awarded damages of $4.24 million, which bore no relationship to the facts of the
case, the plaintiffs’ own testimony, or the Court’s instructions on the law.
The Court has already concluded that the jury’s verdict must be set aside,
and a new trial ordered, because the verdict of liability was against the weight of
the evidence, and because of counsel’s misconduct throughout trial. In addition,
the Court finds that the jury’s award of damages must be set aside because it is
impossible to justify such an extraordinarily high amount based on the limited
evidence that was offered in support of any damages award at all; it was by any
measure excessive.
Although the jury heard evidence regarding mental and
emotional distress claimed by the plaintiffs, and some general testimony regarding
the costs of hauling water from an off-site location, neither of these categories
provided a basis for the jury to award any amount of damages for nuisance alone.
(N.T. 3/9 105:25-106:2.) Instead, the jury was to award damages, if any, for the
plaintiffs’ inconvenience in the disruption of their water consumption and day-today activities on their property.
56
The plaintiffs offered limited evidence regarding their water conservation
activities, including, among other privations: limitations on showering, (see, e.g.,
N.T. 2/24 207:15-19); resorting to doing laundry at a Laundromat (see, e.g., N.T.
2/25 50:10-12, 207:15-22); reusing bath water (see, e.g., N.T. 2/24 92:24-93:1);
and monthly checks of water tank supply (see, e.g., N.T. 3/3 33:19-25, 34:2535:24); and in Ray Hubert’s case, bathing in a pond on the property. Although
some of these matters were doubtless inconvenient, the evidence also reveals that
many of these actions were likely unnecessary since the condition of the plaintiffs’
water had improved over time and the plaintiffs has been offered, and refused,
mitigation systems.
Given the profoundly mixed, equivocal and limited nature of this damages
evidence, there simply is no reasoned and informed way to comprehend how these
examples of inconvenience justified an award of the size handed down by the jury.
Although a jury generally has broad discretion to consider damages, its award must
still be grounded in a reasonable assessment of the evidence, and the jury may not
abandon analysis for sympathy. See, e.g., Gumbs v. Pueblo Intern., Inc., 823 F.2d
768, 773 (3d Cir. 1987) (“A jury has very broad discretion in measuring damages;
nevertheless, a jury may not abandon analysis for sympathy for a suffering plaintiff
and treat an injury as though it were a winning lottery ticket. There must be a
rational relationship between the specific injury sustained and the amount
57
awarded.”). Given the paucity of proof of damages, and the potential for confusion
created by the plaintiffs’ presentation at trial, in addition to finding that the verdict
of liability was against the weight of the evidence, and was likely affected by
plaintiffs’ counsel’s improper conduct, we conclude the jury’s award of damages
also lacks sufficient basis and must be set aside.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, an Order will be entered granting Cabot’s
motion in part, vacating the jury’s verdict in favor of the plaintiffs in its entirety,
and ordering that a new trial be held if the parties are unable to reach a mutual
settlement of the plaintiffs’ remaining claims.
/s/ Martin C. Carlson
Martin C. Carlson
United States Magistrate Judge
Dated: March 31, 2017
58
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