The more the merrier is not always true. Ask any defendant in a trial that consolidates the claims of multiple plaintiffs. The existence of multiple plaintiffs can conjure up an inference of guilt. If you are accused of hurting more than one person, that seems to increase the chance that the factfinder will conclude that you did something wrong. Surely there are studies that document this psychological effect. But everyday experience confirms it as much as anything else.
So does not-so-everyday experience. We have been called for jury duty in Chester County, Pennsylvania on several occasions. Once we actually served on a jury in a medical malpractice case and returned a verdict. (We wrote about that experience here). Another time, we lingered on the venire for most of a day in a criminal case. The voir dire was extensive and ended just before the lawyers would have gotten to us. Thus, we remained gloriously mute and were sent on our way back to the juror assembly room. Presumably, enough jurors had escaped for-cause challenges and there were enough after taking into account peremptories. We were eventually released for the day and found out that evening that our jury service for that year had been fulfilled. That was good news. But we had grown interested in the case. The defendant was accused of rape. Obviously, any juror on the case would be instructed not to perform any research, internet or otherwise, on the case. But that no longer would apply to us. After one simple Google search, we learned that the defendant had been arrested for several rapes and was facing several separate trials. Yikes. We could not help but wonder what would be the result if one of the impaneled jurors had violated the court order, entered keystrokes similar to ours, and discovered the fact of the defendant’s multiple arrests. It would have been enormously prejudicial. Maybe some unfortunate soul could be erroneously accused of one rape, but with two accusations the case starts to look compelling. One might even think that the burden of proof was now shifted to the defendant to show he did not do it. That would be wrong, of course, but many years of human evolution have linked our survival to pattern recognition and pessimism. Good for survival of the fittest, but not good for someone facing multiple accusations of malfeasance. The law is designed to protect against unfair inferences.
The law did protect against such unfair inferences in DLP Conemaugh Memorial Center, LLC et al. v. Jane BR 1 Doe, et al., 2026 WL 1465908 (Pa. Superior Ct. May 26, 2026). DLP Conemaugh is a Pennsylvania Superior Court decision that is extremely favorable to defendants seeking to fend off consolidation of personal injury cases for trial. Bexis wishes this case had been on the books when he was a mid-level associate in the Cretaceous Period, so that he would not have been stuck trying asbestos cases in groups of up to ten in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas. But as we write this, Bexis is on vacation in a glorious location, so things have not turned out too badly.
DLP Conemaugh is not a product liability case. Rather, it involved a Pennsylvania version of an MDL (Rule 213.1) with allegations of sexual abuse of minors at the hands of a now imprisoned pediatrician. (So DLP Conemaugh really does remind us of that near-miss criminal trial.) The 140 plaintiffs sued various solvent medical care providers who had some sort of relationship with the imprisoned doctor. The master complaint alleged the same causes of action by all plaintiffs: childhood sexual abuse and vicarious liability, negligence – hiring/retention, negligent supervision, negligent misrepresentation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, civil conspiracy to protect reputation and finances, medical negligence, violations of Title IX, and corporate negligence. The judge entered an order “directing that four bellwether cases be ‘combined and … tried together.’” The cases involved different solvent defendants, and different types and durations of alleged sexual abuse over a multi-year period.
The defendants, understandably, objected to the consolidated trial. The judge stuck to his guns, stating that “it was the court’s intention to select a broad assortment of cases that would provide the court and parties the opportunity to resolve a variety of issues that would arise by way of motion practice and allow them to develop a procedure to move the remaining cases more effectively towards resolution.” One does not need any special skill at reading between the lines to see that “resolve” and “resolution” as an expression of the court’s fervent desire that the parties settle the cases. So much — too much — gets sacrificed on the altar of settlement. One thing that got sacrificed by the court’s ruling was any consideration of whether the defendants would be prejudiced by consolidation. The trial court simply did not address that issue.
Some defendants moved for reconsideration of the consolidation order. The judge denied reconsideration, then the judge recused himself from this case. (We do not know why.) Then that same judge certified the consolidation issue for interlocutory appeal. (Yes, the order of things is confusing and counter-intuitive, but it ended up not mattering.)
The issue raised on appeal was “Whether the trial court abused its discretion in ordering the consolidation for joint trial of the four cases of Plaintiffs BR1, TS 11, AS67, and AP78, where the cases do not involve common parties or common questions of fact and law, and where consolidation will result in unfair prejudice to [DLP and LPA]?”
The Superior Court started where it must, with Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 213(a), which governs consolidation of actions pending in the same county. It provides: “In actions pending in a county which involve a common question of law or fact or which arises from the same transaction or occurrence, the court on its own or on the motion of any party may order a joint hearing or trial of any matter in issue in the actions, may order the actions consolidated, and may make orders that avoid unnecessary cost or delay.” Comments and case law explain that consolidation can possibly benefit both sides of the v, can prevent inconsistent verdicts, and can reduce delays and expenses.
Were there common issues of law in the various sexual abuse cases? Maybe. After all, the complaints stated the same causes of action. Were there common issues of fact? Not really. “The four actions here do not arise from the same transaction or occurrence; they arose at different times and places over a period of sixteen years.” What prompted the Superior Court to vacate the consolidation order were the risks of prejudice and jury confusion. There was no way a four-plaintiff trial could not have prejudiced the defendants. Trying four cases at once would risk “guilt by association” and that the jury would confuse what evidence applied to which defendant. Who knew what when (about the pediatrician) would be key issues for each defendant, and the different facts and time periods would be hard for the jury to keep straight. The trial court also “admitted that the four bellwether cases ‘include stronger and weaker fact patterns against some or all of the Defendants.’” Some defendant was likely going to pay a price by being grouped in with others.
Further, a “proposed special verdict form under this scenario may necessarily be long and extraordinarily complex.” Nor would limiting instructions alleviate the potential for prejudice. Consequently, “[a]ll of these factors counsel against consolidation in the manner contemplated by the trial court.” The trial court’s utter failure even to address the prejudice issue was particularly damning. The Superior Court held that “[i]n sum, the prejudice and confusion that consolidation will cause leads us to conclude that the order of consolidation constitutes an abuse of discretion by the trial court.”
The problems of prejudice and confusion from consolidation identified by the DLP Conemaugh court are much the same problems that plague all forms of personal injury consolidation, as we discussed here. Having this precedential case on the books in Pennsylvania will greatly assist our clients in opposing similar consolidations.