              IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

                                        No. 112,429

  VERNON A. BURNETTE and GAIL BURNETTE, as the Heirs-at-Law of VERNON "JOEL"
 BURNETTE, Deceased, and VERNON A. BURNETTE, as the Personal Representative of the
                 Estate of VERNON "JOEL" BURNETTE, Deceased,
                                  Appellees,

                                              v.

                                KIMBER L. EUBANKS, M.D.,
                                  and PAINCARE, P.A.,
                                       Appellants.


                              SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1.
       To recover damages on a medical malpractice theory a plaintiff must show: (i) the
health care provider owed the patient a duty of care, which required the provider to meet
or exceed a certain standard of care to protect the patient from injury; (ii) the provider
breached that duty or deviated from the standard of care; (iii) the patient was injured; and
(iv) the injury proximately resulted from the health care provider's breach of the standard
of care.


2.
       Proximate cause is the cause that in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken
by any superseding cause, both produced the injury and was necessary for the injury. The
injury must be the natural and probable consequence of the wrongful act. Individuals are
not responsible for all possible consequences arising from their negligence—just those
that are probable according to ordinary and usual experience.




                                              1
3.
        An event may have more than one but-for cause. Any perceived distinction
between the phrases "causing an event" and "contributing to an event" is a distinction
without a difference. In other words, an act of negligence that contributes to an event
must, of necessity, have at least a part in causing the event.


4.
        The purpose in awarding damages is to make a party whole by restoring that party
to the position the party was in prior to the injury.


5.
        To warrant recovery for damages, there must be some reasonable basis for
computation to enable the trier of fact to arrive at an estimate of the amount of the loss.


6.
        An item identified as an economic loss must be capable of being valued using
either expert testimony or the jury's common-sense understanding about what an item of
actual loss costs in the marketplace.


7.
        Economic loss in a wrongful death case should be equivalent to those economic
benefits or compensation that reasonably could have been expected to have resulted from
the continued life of the deceased.


        Review of the judgment of the Court of Appeals in 52 Kan. App. 2d 751, 379 P.3d 372 (2016).
Appeal from Johnson District Court; PAUL C. GURNEY, judge. Opinion filed August 24, 2018. Judgment
of the Court of Appeals affirming the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part on the issues
subject to review. Judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part on the issues
subject to review, and the case is remanded with directions.



                                                      2
        Steven C. Day, of Woodard, Hernandez, Roth & Day, LLC, of Wichita, argued the cause, and
Christopher S. Cole, of the same firm, and Bruce Keplinger and Christopher Lucas, of Norris &
Keplinger, LLC, of Overland Park, were with him on the briefs for appellants.


        Michael W. Blanton, of Blanton Law Firm, of Evergreen, Colorado, argued the cause, and Scott
E. Nutter, John M. Parisi, and Daniel A. Singer, of Shamberg, Johnson & Bergman, Chartered, of Kansas
City, Missouri, were with him on the briefs for appellees.


The opinion of the court was delivered by


        BILES, J.: Kimber L. Eubanks, M.D., and PainCARE, P.A., appeal from a jury
verdict finding them liable for medical malpractice after a patient committed suicide. The
lawsuit alleges Vernon "Joel" Burnette contracted bacterial meningitis from lumbar
epidural steroid injections administered through an infected lump in 2009. Joel developed
arachnoiditis, a severe pain disorder caused by inflammation of a membrane protecting
spinal cord nerves. This pain led Joel to suicide in 2013. On appeal, defendants challenge
the causal link between their medical treatment and the suicide. They also contest
$550,000 in wrongful death economic damages awarded to Joel's parents.


        Defendants argue: (1) the jury instructions were wrong because they did not
expressly require their medical malpractice to be a "but-for" cause of Joel's suicide; (2)
the expert testimony was legally insufficient to establish their negligence caused Joel's
suicide; and (3) the trial court improperly permitted the jury to consider as economic
damages the parent's claim for "[l]oss of attention, care, and loss of a complete family,"
rather than considering those losses noneconomic, which would subject them to the
statutory cap under K.S.A. 60-1903. A Court of Appeals panel affirmed. Burnette v.
Eubanks, 52 Kan. App. 2d 751, 779, 379 P.3d 372 (2016).




                                                     3
       We hold the jury instructions on causation were legally and factually appropriate,
so there was no error. And based on the reasoning used to resolve the jury instruction
causation issue, we hold the expert testimony was legally sufficient because it described
the causal link between defendants' negligence and Joel's suicide in harmony with those
instructions.


       We reverse the $550,000 awarded as economic damages for "[l]oss of attention,
care, and loss of a complete family." The evidence supporting these losses impermissibly
distorted the distinction between economic and noneconomic damages. Economic losses
possess a tangible quality for which a plaintiff is entitled to the jury's valuation
essentially as replacement for the loss. See McCart v. Muir, 230 Kan. 618, 626, 641 P.2d
384 (1982) (economic losses are the "loss of money or of something by which money or
something of money value may be acquired"). And while each case has nuanced
circumstances, an item identified as an economic loss must be capable of being valued
using either expert testimony or the jury's common-sense understanding about what an
item of actual loss costs in the marketplace. See Wentling v. Medical Anesthesia Services,
237 Kan. 503, 514-15, 701 P.2d 939 (1985). The evidence failed this established
standard.


       We affirm the jury's verdict on the causation issues, but reverse and vacate the
disputed $550,000 monetary award. We remand the case to the district court for entry of
judgment consistent with this decision.


                        FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

       Before his death, Joel sued Eubanks, Daniel Bruning, M.D., and their clinic,
PainCARE, P.A., alleging negligence in administering epidural steroid injections for back
pain. Joel claimed he told the clinic's nursing staff and Eubanks about a painful lump on

                                               4
his back, but Eubanks dismissed the concern and gave him an injection through the
infected lump—failing to diagnose and medically treat his spinal epidural abscess. From
this, Joel claimed he developed spinal meningitis, significant permanent nerve damage,
and arachnoiditis. About four years after the injection, Joel committed suicide.


       Joel left his parents a note explaining he "couldn't live one more day with this
pain." He wrote, "I tried. So damn hard. I tried. For three long years I tried. And now, I'm
tired. So tired. Tired of the pain. Tired of the frustration. Tired of failing. Tired. So very,
very, tired."


       Joel's parents, Vernon and Gail Burnette, filed a wrongful death claim against
Eubanks and PainCARE based on the new cause of action arising from the suicide. They
continued with Joel's original lawsuit as a "survival" action on behalf of his estate. See
K.S.A. 60-1801 (cause of action for personal injury by wrongful act or omission survives
death of person entitled to maintain claim). The district court consolidated the lawsuits. A
jury found Eubanks and PainCARE at fault for Joel's injuries and death.


       On the personal injury claim, the jury awarded Joel's estate $2,060,317.84,
including $1,460,000 in noneconomic damages. Those noneconomic damages were
reduced to $250,000 by court order. See K.S.A. 60-19a02 (statutory cap for noneconomic
losses in personal injury actions). On the wrongful death claim, the jury awarded Joel's
parents $820,062. This included funeral expenses and an additional $550,000 as
economic damages, which were not subject to a noneconomic damages cap in wrongful
death actions. See K.S.A. 60-1903. The $550,000 economic award was itemized on the
verdict form as "[l]oss of attention, care, and loss of a complete family." Defendants
appealed. A Court of Appeals panel affirmed. Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at 779.



                                               5
          Defendants timely filed a petition for review with this court, which we granted.
Jurisdiction is proper. See K.S.A. 20-3018(b) (providing for petitions for review of Court
of Appeals decisions); K.S.A. 60-2101(b) (Supreme Court has jurisdiction to review
Court of Appeals decisions upon petition for review).


                                    THE CAUSATION INSTRUCTIONS

          We consider first whether the jury instructions improperly diluted the legally
necessary causal link between defendants' conduct and Joel's suicide. The panel
succinctly described the chain of events: "But for [defendants'] negligence, it was
foreseeable that Joel would have become infected. Then, due to infection, Joel contracted
arachnoiditis and because of the arachnoiditis, Joel committed suicide." 52 Kan. App. 2d
at 762.


          To recover damages on a medical malpractice theory, a plaintiff must show:


          "(1) [T]he health care provider owed the patient a duty of care, which required that the
          provider meet or exceed a certain standard of care to protect the patient from injury; (2)
          the provider breached that duty or deviated from the standard of care; (3) the patient was
          injured; and (4) the injury proximately resulted from the health care provider's breach of
          the standard of care. Miller v. Johnson, 295 Kan. 636, Syl. ¶ 15, 289 P.3d 1098 (2012)."
          Foster v. Klaumann, 296 Kan. 295, 302, 294 P.3d 223 (2013).


          Our attention is on that fourth element. Proximate cause is the cause that "'"in
natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by an efficient intervening cause, produces
the injury and without which the injury would not have occurred, the injury being the
natural and probable consequence of the wrongful act."'" Yount v. Deibert, 282 Kan. 619,
624-25, 147 P.3d 1065 (2006). Individuals are not responsible for all possible


                                                       6
consequences arising from their negligence—just those that are probable according to
ordinary and usual experience. Hale v. Brown, 287 Kan. 320, 322, 197 P.3d 438 (2008).


       Defendants argue they can be liable only if Joel's suicide would not have occurred
without their negligent conduct, i.e., but-for causation. They claim the jury instructions
failed to ensure this.


       From defendants' perspective, the culprit is Jury Instruction No. 11, which stated:
"A party is at fault when he or she is negligent and that negligence caused or contributed
to the event which brought about the claim for damages." (Emphasis added.) Defendants
contend the italicized language permitted the jury to find liability without making the
legally required causal connection between their negligence and Joel's suicide nearly four
years later. To resolve this, we must decide whether an actor's conduct that "contributes
to" an event that brings about the claim is the same as a "but-for" cause of a plaintiff's
injuries.


       We consider jury instructions together and read them as a whole. Puckett v. Mt.
Carmel Regional Med. Center, 290 Kan. 406, 437, 228 P.3d 1048 (2010). And as
discussed below, when taken as a whole, the instructions correctly supply the cause-in-
fact requirement under Kansas law. Instruction No. 11, which is the centerpiece for this
question, permitted the jury to find a defendant at fault only if that defendant's negligence
"caused or contributed to the event which brought about the claim for damages."
(Emphasis added.) If the jury believed Joel's suicide would have occurred without a
defendant's negligence, i.e., the negligence did not have a share in producing Joel's death,
the instructions required the jury to find no fault as to that defendant. In other words, to
impose liability for Joel's suicide under Instruction No. 11, the jury would have to have
found a defendant's negligence was a "but-for" cause of his death. This, coupled with the


                                              7
other instructions, correctly stated the law and appropriately communicated to the jury
the test to be applied.


Additional Background

          The district court provided two other relevant instructions. Instruction No. 12
stated:


          "When answering questions on the verdict form, you should keep the following things in
          mind:


                  "1. Your first obligation is to determine if any defendant is at fault.


                  "2. If you decide that any defendant is at fault, you must then assign a percentage
          of fault to each defendant you find to be at fault.


                  "3. For a defendant not at fault, show 0% on the verdict form.


                  "4. If you find any defendant at fault, show 1% to 100% on the verdict form for
          that defendant.


                  "5. If one or more defendants are assigned fault, the total of all fault must be
          100%.


                  "You may assign fault to:


                  "Kimber L. Eubanks, M.D.


                  "PainCARE, P.A." (Emphases added.)




                                                        8
          Instruction No. 16 stated: "The plaintiffs claim that Joel Burnette was injured,
sustained damages, and died due to the defendants' fault in one or more of the following
respects." (Emphasis added.) It then identified the negligence allegations against Eubanks
and PainCARE. It then told the jury: "The plaintiffs have the burden to prove that one or
more of their claims are more probably true than not true. It is not necessary that each of
you agree upon a specific claim."


          At trial, defendants objected to Instruction No. 11 claiming it incorrectly stated
causation under the wrongful death statute, which authorizes an action for damages
resulting from a person's death "caused by the wrongful act or omission of another."
(Emphasis added.) K.S.A. 60-1901. They renewed this objection when requesting a new
trial. The district court conceded Instruction No. 11 "doesn't square perfectly" with the
wrongful death statute but concluded it was legally appropriate anyway, relying on
caselaw in which the same instruction was used in comparative-fault wrongful death
claims.


          In the Court of Appeals, defendants continued to assert Instruction No. 11
conflicted with the wrongful death statute. Defendants argued the words "contributed to"
permitted the jury to hold them liable if it found their negligence had just a small part in
causing the accident but without finding Joel's suicide would not have occurred "but-for"
that negligence. They further claimed the phrasing "caused or contributed to" aggravated
their concern because the word "or" operated as a conjunctive that made "caused"
irrelevant in the jury's deliberative process. Defendants would have stricken "or
contributed to" from Instruction No. 11. The panel disagreed. Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d
at 756.


          The panel noted plaintiffs proved both causation in fact and legal causation. It
said, "The ultimate question the jury had to decide . . . was whether Joel's death was a
                                             9
result of [defendants' negligence]"; and since plaintiffs alleged two parties were at fault,
"[c]ertainly . . . within the context of the jury's assessment of comparative fault, the use of
the word 'contributed' is appropriate." 52 Kan. App. 2d at 762. The panel held "a
contributing cause is a cause as the term is used in the wrongful death statute," so if a
defendant's "negligence contributes to the cause of death and it is foreseeable, then [the
defendant] can be held liable for that death in proportion to [the defendant's] percentage
of fault." 52 Kan. App. 2d at 759. The panel further reasoned comparative fault principles
applied in a wrongful death action because the comparative negligence statute provides
that a party's contributory negligence "'does not bar that party or its legal representative
from recovering damages for negligence resulting in death . . . if that party's negligence
was less than the causal negligence of the party or parties against whom a claim is
made.'" 52 Kan. App. 2d at 751 (quoting K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 60-258a[a] and citing cases
applying comparative fault in wrongful death cases).


       Finally, the panel concluded defendants' interpretation of the wrongful death
statute was too restrictive because it would preclude recovery "when there are complex
facts and several different forces are engaged in an incident that results in death." 52 Kan.
App. 2d at 758. It held the defendants' proposed instruction was legally inappropriate.


Standard of Review

               "'For jury instruction issues, the progression of analysis and corresponding
       standards of review on appeal are: (1) First, the appellate court should consider the
       reviewability of the issue from both jurisdiction and preservation viewpoints, exercising
       an unlimited standard of review; (2) next, the court should use an unlimited review to
       determine whether the instruction was legally appropriate; (3) then, the court should
       determine whether there was sufficient evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to
       the defendant or the requesting party, that would have supported the instruction; and (4)
       finally, if the district court erred, the appellate court must determine whether the error

                                                    10
       was harmless, utilizing the test and degree of certainty set forth in State v. Ward, 292
       Kan. 541, 256 P.3d 801 (2011) . . . .' [Citation omitted.]" Foster, 296 Kan. at 301-02.


Discussion

       There are two preliminary points. First, although defendants' instruction issue and
our holding apply equally to the survival action, defendants frame the question as a
challenge limited to the wrongful death claim. Presumably this is to bring focus on the
wrongful death statute's "caused by the wrongful act or omission of another" language.
(Emphasis added.) K.S.A. 60-1901(a). Second, defendants do not question the panel's
conclusion that comparative fault applies in wrongful death actions, nor do they suggest
the causal requirement in wrongful death actions is more stringent than other negligence
claims. We mention this because the panel needlessly explored whether comparative fault
applies in wrongful death suits. 52 Kan. App. 2d at 758-59. As a practical matter, that
was a distraction because defendants did not dispute it.


       We must focus on the second step in the jury instruction analysis, i.e., whether
Instruction No. 11 was legally appropriate. An instruction "'must always fairly and
accurately state the applicable law, and an instruction that does not do so would be
legally infirm."' State v. McDaniel, 306 Kan. 595, 615, 395 P.3d 429 (2017) (quoting
State v. Plummer, 295 Kan. 156, 161, 283 P.3d 202 [2012]). The instruction asked the
jury to determine whether Joel's suicide proximately resulted from the alleged breach of
the standard of care by these two healthcare providers. See Foster, 296 Kan. at 302
(proximate cause is one of the four elements plaintiff must show in order to establish
medical malpractice).




                                                    11
      In Kansas,


               "[t]here are two components of proximate cause: causation in fact and legal
      causation. To establish causation in fact, a plaintiff must prove a cause-and-effect
      relationship between a defendant's conduct and the plaintiff's loss by presenting sufficient
      evidence from which a jury can conclude that more likely than not, but for defendant's
      conduct, the plaintiff's injuries would not have occurred. To prove legal causation, the
      plaintiff must show it was foreseeable that the defendant's conduct might create a risk of
      harm to the victim and that the result of that conduct and contributing causes was
      foreseeable." Drouhard-Nordhus v. Rosenquist, 301 Kan. 618, 623, 345 P.3d 281 (2015).


      Proximate cause is ordinarily a factual question to be resolved by the trier of fact.
Cullip v. Domann, 266 Kan. 550, 972 P.2d 776 (1999). But see Hale, 287 Kan. at 324
(noting when "all the evidence on which a party relies is undisputed and susceptible of
only one inference, the question of proximate cause becomes one of law").


      Under the comparative fault statute,


               "(a) Effect of contributory negligence. The contributory negligence of a party in a
      civil action does not bar that party or its legal representative from recovering damages for
      negligence resulting in death, personal injury, property damage or economic loss, if that
      party's negligence was less than the causal negligence of the party or parties against
      whom a claim is made, but the award of damages to that party must be reduced in
      proportion to the amount of negligence attributed to that party. If a party claims damages
      for a decedent's wrongful death, the negligence of the decedent, if any, must be imputed
      to that party.


               ....


               "(d) Apportioning liability. When the comparative negligence of the parties is an
      issue and recovery is permitted against more than one party, each party is liable for that

                                                   12
      portion of the total dollar amount awarded as damages to a claimant in the proportion that
      the amount of that party's causal negligence bears to the amount of the causal negligence
      attributed to all parties against whom recovery is permitted." (Emphases added.) K.S.A.
      2017 Supp. 60-258a.


      In comparative fault cases, the PIK Committee recommends instructing a jury:


                "You must decide this case by comparing the fault of the parties. In doing so, you
      will need to know the meaning of the terms 'negligence' and 'fault.'


                "Negligence is the lack of reasonable care. It is the failure of a person to do
      something that a reasonable person would do, or it is doing something that a reasonable
      person would not do, under the same circumstances.


                ....


                "A party is at fault when he or she is negligent and that negligence caused or
      contributed to the event which brought about the claim(s) for damages.


                "I am required to reduce the amount of damages you may find for any party by
      the percentage of fault, if any, that you find is attributable to the party.


                "A party will be able to recover damages only if that party's fault is less than 50
      percent of the total fault assigned. A party will not be able to recover damages, however,
      if that party's fault is 50 percent or more." (Emphasis added.) PIK Civ. 4th 105.01 (2010
      Supp.).


      The italicized language was covered by Instruction No. 11.


      The pattern instruction's definition of "fault" first appeared in Kansas caselaw in
1978. It then repeated in numerous decisions from this court. See Miles v. West, 224 Kan.

                                                     13
284, 289, 580 P.2d 876 (1978) (holding no error in automobile negligence case for failing
to instruct on proximate cause regarding defendant's intoxication when fault instruction
made clear the intoxication "had to cause or contribute to the accident before the jury
could assess liability on that basis" [emphasis added]); see, e.g., Sharples v. Roberts, 249
Kan. 286, 295, 816 P.2d 390 (1991) ("The plaintiff bears the burden of proving the
necessary causation and normally in medical malpractice cases, this court has described
the duty in general terms, merely stating there must be a causal connection between the
negligent act and the injury or that the act caused or contributed to the injury."
[Emphasis added.]); Allman v. Holleman, 233 Kan. 781, Syl. ¶ 4, 667 P.2d 296 (1983)
("A party is at fault when he is negligent and his negligence caused or contributed to the
event which brought about the injury or damages for which the claim is made."
[Emphasis added.]).


       The PIK Committee explains that the court in Reynolds v. Kansas Dept. of
Transportation, 273 Kan. 261, 269, 43 P.3d 799 (2002), approved PIK's definition of
fault. PIK Civ. 4th 105.01 Comment. Reynolds contains this brief statement: "[T]he jury
was correctly instructed that '[a] party is at fault when he or she is negligent and that
negligence caused or contributed to the event which brought about the injury or damages
for which a claim is made.'" (Emphasis added.) 273 Kan. at 269. But Reynolds did not
analyze whether this correctly conveyed the cause-in-fact component. See 273 Kan. at
269. We consider that next.


       Our "proximate cause" requirement, which encompasses both causation-in-fact
and legal causation, is equivalent to the "legal cause" concept from the Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 431 (1965). Donnini v. Ouano, 15 Kan. App. 2d 517, 520, 810 P.2d
1163 (1991); see also Roberson v. Counselman, 235 Kan. 1006, 1012, 686 P.2d 149
(1984), modified on other grounds by Delany v. Cade, 255 Kan. 199, 873 P.2d 175
(1994); Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Harm § 26, comment a
                                           14
(2010) (noting Restatement Second employed "'legal cause' to encompass two distinct
inquiries: factual cause and proximate cause").


       Under the Restatement, an actor's conduct is "a legal cause of harm to another if
(a) [the actor's] conduct is a substantial factor in bringing about the harm, and (b) there is
no rule of law relieving the actor from liability because of the manner in which [the
actor's] negligence has resulted in the harm." Restatement (Second) of Torts § 431
(1965). And consistent with Kansas' cause-in-fact requirement, under the Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 432 (1965),


               "(1) Except as stated in Subsection (2), the actor's negligent conduct is not a
       substantial factor in bringing about harm to another if the harm would have been
       sustained even if the actor had not been negligent.


               "(2) If two forces are actively operating, one because of the actor's negligence,
       the other not because of any misconduct on his part, and each of itself is sufficient to
       bring about harm to another, the actor's negligence may be found to be a substantial
       factor in bringing it about." (Emphases added.)


       Similar to how Kansas treats "proximate cause," the Restatement (Third) of Torts
refines in a consistent way the Restatement (Second) concept by abandoning the phrase
"legal cause" and more pointedly describing causation as two separate components:
"Factual Cause" and "Scope of Liability (Proximate Cause)." Restatement (Third) of
Torts, Chapters 5 & 6 (2010). And as with the cause-in-fact component of "legal cause"
under the Restatement (Second), factual cause under the Restatement (Third) requires
but-for causation—except when there are multiple causes, each sufficient to cause the
harm. Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical and Emotional Harm § 26,
comment c (2010). Describing factual causation, the Restatement (Third) explains:


                                                    15
       "An actor's tortious conduct need only be a factual cause of the other's harm. The
       existence of other causes of the harm does not affect whether specified tortious conduct
       was a necessary condition for the harm to occur. Those other causes may be innocent or
       tortious, known or unknown, influenced by the tortious conduct or independent of it, but
       so long as the harm would not have occurred absent the tortious conduct, the tortious
       conduct is a factual cause. Recognition of multiple causes does not require modifying or
       abandoning the but-for standard in this Section. Tortious conduct by an actor need be
       only one of the causes of another's harm. When there are multiple sufficient causes . . . ,
       each of which is sufficient to cause the plaintiff's harm, supplementation of the but-for
       standard is appropriate. [Citation omitted.]


                 "A useful model for understanding factual causation is to conceive of a set made
       up of each of the necessary conditions for the plaintiff's harm. Absent any one of the
       elements of the set, the plaintiff's harm would not have occurred. Thus, there will always
       be multiple (some say, infinite) factual causes of a harm, although most will not be of
       significance for tort law and many will be unidentified. That there are a large number of
       causes of an event does not mean that everything is a cause of an event. The vast majority
       of acts, omissions, and other factors play no role in causing any discrete event.


                 "This causal-set model does not imply any chronological relationship among the
       causal elements involved, although all causes must precede the plaintiff's harm. . . . Nor
       does this model imply any relationship among the causal elements; causal elements may
       operate independently, as when a property owner neglects a patch of ice on a sidewalk
       and a careless pedestrian fails to notice the condition, producing a fall." (Emphases
       added.) Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Harm § 26, comment c
       (2010).


       In Hale, the court rejected an effort to "jettison the traditional concept of
proximate cause and replace it with a requirement that a plaintiff be able to prove that
injury resulting from the defendant's conduct was foreseeable and that the defendant's
conduct contributed to the injury." 287 Kan. at 323. In other words, the plaintiff
contended that "any contribution to the plaintiff's injuries should be left for the jury to
                                            16
calculate as a percentage of overall fault." 287 Kan. at 323-24. The court reasoned that
"such an expansive causation element would greatly increase the number of potential
defendants in negligence actions and the concomitant costs of litigation," and would
conflict with statutes the court viewed as "recogniz[ing] proximate cause as an element of
negligence actions." 287 Kan. at 323.


       The issue in Hale was not causation in fact, but legal cause. The Hale court upheld
a district court's decision granting defendants' summary dismissal from a comparative
fault lawsuit based on plaintiff's failure to establish proximate cause. The defendant
motorist was in a single-car accident. Plaintiff slowed her vehicle at the accident scene,
and another motorist ran into her. The court held the defendant motorist did not
proximately cause the collision involving plaintiff because the passage of time and the
third party's intervening negligence broke the causal connection between the defendant
motorist's actions and plaintiff's injuries. 287 Kan. at 324; cf. Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 433 (1965) (listing considerations important when determining if conduct is a
"substantial factor" in bringing about harm, including lapse of time and whether an actor's
conduct was harmless unless acted on by other forces outside actor's responsibility).


       Hale speaks to the legal cause component of the causation element proposed and
rejected in that case. But a second case addresses the piece not discussed in Hale—the
factual cause component. In Lollis v. Superior Sales Co., Inc., 224 Kan. 251, 252, 580
P.2d 423 (1978), the court held a police officer who investigated an automobile accident
could not testify that plaintiff was speeding and following too closely, or that the
defendant driver made no "contributing actions." In doing so, the court applied the rule
that expert testimony is inadmissible when lay jurors' normal experience and
qualifications would enable them to draw proper conclusions without expert opinion. 224
Kan. at 261. It reasoned that fault in causing the accident was within common
knowledge. And as to this causation issue, the court explained:
                                            17
       "[T]he distinction between 'causing an accident' and 'contributing to an accident' is a
       distinction without a difference. . . . An act of negligence which contributes to an accident
       must, of necessity, have at least a part in causing the accident. We note that in Webster's
       Third New International Dictionary 496 (3rd ed.), the word 'contribute' is defined in a
       causal sense as 'to have a share in any act or effect.' Likewise, the word 'contributing' is
       defined as something that 'has a part in producing an effect.' We, therefore, hold that in an
       automobile negligence case, an expert witness, whether an investigating police officer or
       another expert, may not state his opinion as to what actions of the parties, if any,
       contributed to the collision or as to who was at fault in causing the collision." 224 Kan. at
       263.


       Similarly, in Puckett v. Mt. Carmel Regional Med. Center, 290 Kan. 406, 435, 228
P.3d 1048 (2010), the court indicated a cause that "contributed to causing" a subsequent
event is a but-for cause of that event. The court held it was error to instruct that a doctor's
negligence in using a particular medical device could cut off liability for earlier health
care providers whose negligence created the conditions necessitating the doctor's
intervention with that device. 290 Kan. at 436-37.


       The instruction was error, the court explained, because expert testimony
established a cause-in-fact relationship between the earlier medical care and the
decedent's death from aspiration, and because no evidence established the later doctor's
intervention was "so extraordinary or unusual as to break the causal connection between"
the earlier medical care providers' negligence and the death. 290 Kan. at 415, 435, 437.
The event chain was: decedent had an infection the earlier providers failed to properly
diagnose and treat; this caused sepsis; the sepsis was treated with fluids; the combination
of sepsis and fluid retention led to respiratory distress, which required respiratory care;
one treatment method for that care was the device used by the doctor; that device can put



                                                    18
pressure on the stomach; and aspiration can result from pressure on a stomach full of
fluid.


         The court reasoned,


         "[A]ccording to [the expert], no single factor . . . caused the aspiration event. Rather,
         various causes contributed to causing the aspiration . . . . In light of the concurring
         causes, the issue for the jury was whether [the nurse and doctor] committed negligence
         that was the cause in fact of the need to use some form of respiratory assistance that led
         to the foreseeable use of the BiPAP mask. If that cause in fact was established, [the
         expert] connects [the nurse and doctor's] acts or omissions with the other causes of the
         aspiration event. His testimony thus does not provide evidence on which a reasonable
         jury could find a superseding, intervening cause." (Emphasis added.) 290 Kan. at 435.


         Against this background, Eubanks and PainCARE argue the phrase "contributed
to" as a statement of but-for causation allowed plaintiffs too much leeway. They assert all
Joel's parents needed to show was that "in some way, no matter how small, [a]
defendant's negligence played a part in the outcome." But this is wrong. An event may
have multiple but-for causes. Defendants' argument ignores the role "legal causation"
plays to cut off liability for those whose causal conduct is too remote for liability to
attach. See Hale, 287 Kan. at 324.


         We hold Instruction No. 11, taken with the other instructions, correctly
communicated the cause-in-fact requirement under Kansas law. Instruction No. 11
permitted the jury to find fault only if a defendant's negligence "caused or contributed to
the event which brought about the claim(s) for damages." (Emphases added.) Instruction
No. 12 explained how to do that. And Instruction No. 16 told the jury plaintiffs had to
prove they were injured "due to the defendants' fault." (Emphasis added.) Applying the
Lollis court's reasoning, the instructions told the jury that to impose liability for Joel's
                                                      19
suicide on either defendant, it would have to find defendant's negligence was a but-for
cause of his death.


       The "caused or contributed to" language in Instruction No. 11 permitted the jury to
assign fault only if a defendant's negligence "ha[d] a share in" producing the injury.
Lollis, 224 Kan. at 263. If the jury believed the injury would have occurred without a
defendant's negligence, i.e., the negligence did not have a share in producing the injury,
the instructions told the jury to assign no fault to that defendant.


                  EXPERT TESTIMONY ESTABLISHING THE CAUSAL LINK

       Defendants claim they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the
wrongful death claim because plaintiffs' evidence from expert testimony was insufficient
to demonstrate defendants' negligence was a factual cause of Joel's death. This argument
ties directly to the previous but-for causation issue. Defendants contend that because both
plaintiff experts testified defendants' negligence "contributed to" the event chain, the
evidence was fatally lacking in proving but-for causation. Their argument fails for the
same reasons we concluded the jury instructions were legally appropriate.


Additional Background

       Two plaintiff experts gave their opinions about the causal connection between the
alleged medical negligence and Joel's death: Sharleen Clauser, a licensed clinical social
worker, and Steve Simon, M.D., a pain management practitioner from Overland Park.


       Clauser saw Joel about 50 times for psychotherapy sessions. She believed she was
unqualified to make a medical diagnosis but qualified to provide a psychiatric diagnosis.
She thought Joel's arachnoiditis contributed to his suicide. By "contributed to" she meant

                                              20
it was her opinion arachnoiditis caused Joel to have bipolar symptoms that contributed to
his worsening depression. She said Joel's back pain, specifically his "adhesive
arachnoiditis and all of the symptoms with it," contributed to his suicide.


       Simon's opinions were to a reasonable degree of medical certainty or probability.
He examined Joel in September 2012 and believed he suffered from cauda equina
syndrome. Simon said arachnoiditis was scar tissue caused by Joel's meningitis,
producing "a thickening of [the] nerves" and causing them to "[clump] together." He
explained that "a huge problem in chronic pain . . . is the loss of hope that patients get
who have it." Simon described Joel as a patient "controlled by his pain."


       Simon agreed that chronic pain "can contribute to depression and suicide." He said
depression "is probably the most common symptom after pain" for individuals with
chronic pain and explained that "for many patients, when they feel overwhelmed by this
type of a situation and they see no way out, unfortunately, sometimes those patients will
choose suicide. It's something we recognize in the world of chronic pain. I have to admit
that, yes, I've had patients who have done that." Simon agreed that, "Joel's physical pain
contributed to his decision to end his life" and "contributed to cause" that decision.


       Defendants moved for judgment as a matter of law on both the wrongful death and
survival claims. Focusing on the wrongful death, defendants claimed expert medical
testimony was required to "link up causation in the suicide claim." Specifically, they
argued, Clauser's opinion that the arachnoiditis only contributed to the suicide failed to
sufficiently link Joel's death to their negligence. Likewise, they said, Simon only believed
pain played a role in Joel's suicide. The court denied the motion.


       The court found there was "clearly sufficient evidence to support" Joel's survival
claim for damages accruing during his lifetime. It recounted that (1) Clauser said
                                            21
arachnoiditis contributed to the suicide by causing bipolar symptoms and contributing to
his depression worsening; (2) Simon mentioned a contributing link between the condition
and suicide; and (3) another witness testified people with arachnoiditis occasionally
commit suicide. The court said, "I'm going to go back to what [Clauser] testified to. I
think . . . there is sufficient linkage to allow this matter to go before the jury." The court
relied on Wozniak v. Lipoff, 242 Kan. 583, 750 P.2d 971 (1988) (concerning expert
medical testimony necessary to create a jury question whether a doctor's negligence
caused a patient's suicide by prescription medication overdose).


       In revisiting defendants' challenge when deciding the new trial motion, the district
court cast the issue as whether there was sufficient evidence to connect Joel's death back
to the negligence allegations. The court acknowledged no expert testimony concluded the
suicide was "caused by" the alleged negligence, adding: "I don't believe there was the
expert testimony . . . tying up that linkage between the condition and the suicide, but as
per Wozniak, that was not required." The court concluded plaintiffs "clearly established"
sufficient evidence allowing the jury to make the determination that the alleged
negligence caused significant consequences to Joel. The court explained, "[I]t was not
necessarily for the plaintiffs to, through expert testimony, directly tie up that condition
with the suicide through testimony that in an expert's opinion that one caused the other."


       On appeal, defendants continued to argue the expert testimony did not support a
finding that Joel's suicide would not have occurred but for defendants' negligence. They
claimed the testimony permitted the jury to base its decision on conjecture. They also
argued the district court misread Wozniak to create a "suicide exception" to the expert
testimony requirement for proving medical malpractice causation.


       The panel viewed defendants' arguments about Clauser as a challenge to her
testimony's admissibility to prove causation under K.S.A. 65-6319 (defining the
                                            22
permissible scope of licensed social workers' practices). Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at
763. The panel concluded her testimony was admissible within the trial court's discretion.
52 Kan. App. 2d at 764. Then, the panel stated it was unnecessary to decide whether
medical testimony was required to show Joel's suicide was caused by medical negligence
or whether the district court misread Wozniak because Simon and Clauser provided the
necessary expert testimony. 52 Kan. App. 2d at 765.


Standard of Review

       K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 60-250(a) provides:


       "If a party has been fully heard on an issue during a jury trial and the court finds that a
       reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the party
       on that issue, the court may . . . grant a motion for a judgment as a matter of law against
       the party on a claim . . . that, under the controlling law, can be maintained . . . only with a
       favorable finding on that issue."


       An appellate court applies the same standard as the trial court when considering a
motion for judgment as a matter of law under K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 60-250. The court
resolves all facts and inferences reasonably drawn from the evidence in favor of the
nonmoving party. If the evidence could lead reasonable minds to different conclusions,
the motion must be denied. Wolfe Electric, Inc. v. Duckworth, 293 Kan. 375, 405, 266
P.3d 516 (2011) (quoting National Bank of Andover v. Kansas Bankers Surety, Co., 290
Kan. 247, 267, 225 P.3d 707 [2010]); see also Smith v. Kansas Gas Service Co., 285 Kan.
33, 40, 169 P.3d 1052 (2007) ("[A] motion for judgment as a matter of law must be
denied when evidence exists upon which a jury could properly find a verdict for the
nonmoving party."). "'Stated another way, the inquiry is "whether the evidence presents a
sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury or whether it is so one-sided that
one party must prevail as a matter of law."'" Wolfe Electric, Inc., 293 Kan. at 405
                                                     23
(quoting Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 251-52, 106 S. Ct. 2505, 91 L.
Ed. 2d 202 [1986]).


Discussion

       Defendants argue the panel "effectively excused the requirement of expert
testimony to support proximate causation" by upholding the judgment when plaintiffs'
experts only testified that "defendants' actions 'contributed' to the adverse outcome." This
limited testimony, they continue, was "insufficient to establish but-for causation." But
this is simply a revised version of the jury instruction argument rejected above, so the
argument is without merit. See Lollis, 224 Kan. at 263 (holding opinion that party's action
"contributed to" occurrence constitutes opinion on causation because negligence
contributing to an event necessarily had at least a part in causing it). Plaintiffs' evidence
supported the jury's findings that defendants' negligence caused Joel to develop
arachnoiditis.


       Clauser and Simon both testified this condition contributed to Joel's suicide. And
under our construction of "contributed to," as previously discussed, this expert testimony
sufficiently established how the alleged medical negligence produced the suicide, i.e., of
necessity, their actions had at least a part in causing it—either as the sole cause or as one
cause that combined with others to produce the result. See Lollis, 224 Kan. at 263;
Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical and Emotional Harm § 26, comment
c (2010) (harm may have more than one cause, and liability attaches to actor's negligence
so long as it is one of the causes); cf. Sharples, 249 Kan. at 297 (holding trial court
correctly concluded there was insufficient causation evidence in medical malpractice
action when testimony did not "establish that the [negligence] probably caused or
contributed to plaintiff's [injuries]").


                                              24
       While neither Clauser nor Simon expressed their opinions in the language
defendants would have us require, i.e., Joel's suicide would not have occurred "but-for"
defendants' medical negligence, that phrasing was not required. Their testimony
sufficiently established a direct causal link under our caselaw. And since there was expert
testimony sufficient to create a jury question on causation, we need not consider Eubanks'
argument that the district court erred by concluding as an aside that such testimony may
not have even been necessary.


                ECONOMIC/NONECONOMIC WRONGFUL DEATH DAMAGES

       The purpose for awarding damages is to make a party whole by restoring that
party to the position the party was in prior to the injury. Evenson v. Lilley, 295 Kan. 43,
46, 282 P.3d 610 (2012). To warrant recovery for damages, there must be some
reasonable basis for a computation to enable the trier of fact to arrive at an estimate of the
amount of the loss. Miller v. Johnson, 295 Kan. 636, 677, 289 P.3d 1098 (2012); Cerretti
v. Flint Hills Rural Electric Co-op Ass'n, 251 Kan. 347, 360-61, 837 P.2d 330 (1992).


       To be sure, money damages in a wrongful death lawsuit are an inadequate
substitute for a loved one's loss. See Borer v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 19 Cal. 3d 441, 455, 563
P.2d 858 (1977) ("'"Money is a poor substitute for the loss of an only child or the pain
resulting from serious injuries."'"); Theama by Bichler v. City of Kenosha, 117 Wis. 2d
508, 523, 344 N.W.2d 513 (1984) ("'To say that plaintiffs have been "compensated" for
their loss is superficial; in reality they have suffered a loss for which they can never be
compensated.'"). But money damages are what our system permits. K.S.A. 60-1903 and
60-1904; Smith v. Printup, 254 Kan. 315, 334, 866 P.2d 985 (1993) (wrongful death is a
statutory creature; K.S.A. 60-1901 et seq. identifies the specific damages recoverable).




                                             25
       The jury awarded Joel's parents $820,062, which included $550,000 as economic
damages for past and future "[l]oss of attention, care, and loss of a complete family." On
appeal, defendants challenged both the "loss of a complete family" descriptor and the
classification of the parents' evidence concerning their losses denoted as economic
damages. The panel held the verdict form descriptor "loss of a complete family" was
legally inappropriate as an economic loss. Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at 769-70. Plaintiffs
did not seek review of this ruling, so that much is decided. See Ullery v. Othick, 304 Kan.
405, 415, 372 P.3d 1135 (2016). But the panel affirmed the $550,000 award nonetheless.
Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at 771. The evidence supporting that award is now before us
on review.


       To resolve defendants' challenge we must consider: (1) what properly comprises
economic damages, as opposed to noneconomic damages; (2) what evidence, if any,
supported the $550,000 economic loss award upheld by the panel; and (3) whether clear
error requires reversal because the "loss of a complete family" descriptor was erroneously
included as an economic damage item. These inquiries overlap.


       That said, we emphasize no one questions that Joel's death resulted in
heartbreaking loss on many dimensions. But our task is deciding how the evidence
offered at trial to support what remains as the "[l]oss of attention [and] care" claim must
be classified under existing law. That analysis is not meant to be insensitive, but the
necessary legal inquiry no doubt looks that way. See Morris v. Francisco, 238 Kan. 71,
77, 708 P.2d 498 (1985) (commending medical malpractice victim's "spirit in the face of
multiple physical problems that would have daunted many persons," but noting damages
"must be looked at objectively and the proper legal standards applied").




                                             26
Additional Background

       Plaintiffs concede there was no "loss of services" claim of the type that are more
typically understood as economic damages, like lost wages. Defendants argue before this
court that the evidence makes it impossible to differentiate the remaining "[l]oss of
attention [and] care" line item, from what should fall under the verdict form's
noneconomic damages line item entitled "Loss of Society, loss of comfort, or loss of
companionship."


       In their appellate briefing, Joel's parents fully describe what evidence they say
supported their economic "[l]oss of attention [and] care" damages. We quote this
verbatim because it illuminates the controversy and the analytical difficulties when trying
to distinguish the economic claim from the noneconomic "Loss of Society, loss of
comfort, or loss of companionship" claim:


       "Joel's father, Vernon Burnette, testified that Joel took care of the needs of his family.
       Joel was extremely close to his parents. Joel engaged in numerous activities with his
       father including sports, target shooting and fishing. Joel taught his father how to fly-fish.
       Joel spoke to his parents by phone nearly every day. Joel played board games with his
       parents. His father testified that even after his health went downhill, Joel still tried to be
       caring and attentive to the needs of his family. At trial, Joel's father discussed a card that
       Joel had sent to his parents which showed how caring and attentive Joel was to his
       parents. Joel's father testified that Joel regularly gave similar notes to his parents.


               "Joel's mother, Gail Burnette, testified that Joel regularly went on trips to the zoo
       with his parents. He also went on trips to the lake with his parents. She testified that Joel
       was close to his father and engaged in activities with him such as working on cars. In
       describing her relationship with Joel, Gail described him as her best friend. She testified
       that Joel helped his parents see the world through the eyes of a younger generation, and
       that she valued that. She testified that Joel was attentive to the needs of his parents and

                                                     27
      was a caring son. His mother testified that even after Joel became ill, he still tried to be
      attentive to his family's needs. Even after he became sick, Joel continued going to movies
      and similar activities with her, but he found it difficult with his physical condition.


              "Joel's sister, Kim Lazano, testified that Joel was close to his father and engaged
      in many activities with his father. She testified that Joel was also close to his mother and
      engaged in a variety of activities with her. Joel's girlfriend, Ellen Short, testified that Joel
      was close to both his parents."


      The trial testimony paralleled this description. More pointedly, this is the entire
evidentiary basis for the challenged monetary award. And plaintiffs' closing argument on
the wrongful death claim carried this forward when counsel told the jury:


              "Let's talk about the wrongful death claim, that is even a little bit tougher to talk
      about. Some parts are; some parts aren't. There will be a line on the verdict form for
      funeral expenses. We presented the evidence of what those are. And we ask that you
      include in your verdict an award for funeral expenses, $20,062. There will be two lines in
      your verdict form that will be for noneconomic loss to Gail and Vernon. Grief, and I
      can't—my worries can't do justice to what you heard in this courtroom from Gail and
      Vernon. So just remember back to what they said. Vernon is 64 years old; Gail is 63
      years old. If they lived 20 more years, that is 7300 days, 175,200 hours. The sadness they
      feel is so deep, and it's so overwhelming that it's impossible to describe in words, but it
      [came] through.


              "For noneconomic damages, we ask you to include in your verdict for the past,
      $50,000 for the years . . . since they've lost Joel. And for the future, for the next 19 years,
      we ask that you include money in your verdict in the amount of $200,000. $250,000 total,
      not a penny more, but not a penny less. This [is] a reasonable figure in light of the loss
      that they sustained.


               ....


                                                    28
        "What really matters, and where the loss is really felt and where the benefits that
they expected to receive from Joel will no longer be there, is the loss of a complete
family. The loss of Joel's care, the loss of his attention. That came through during the
testimony. And we could have brought you 300 people, everybody who was at the wake
to come and tell a story about Joel and how attentive he was to the needs of his parents,
how he cared for his parents, and how their family unit was so close and so special. We
only brought you a snapshot and it still came through how special that bond is. His note,
his note, the last page of his note, 'call these people, mom and dad, they will help you.' To
the very end, he's most concerned about mom and dad. And he's caring for mom and dad.


        "This is a very close family, they're very loving, they're very supportive of each
other. Now that Joel is gone, Mr. Burnette said it's like losing an arm. Every day and
every hour, you notice it's not there. Gail lost her best friend. She sees him everywhere,
but he's gone. The daily phone calls, the trips to the zoo. It's a special time. They'll live
without for the next 19 years. That is real loss, real harm, and it's more important than a
medical bill. It's more important than lost wages.


        "If you compensated Gail and Vernon, again, $500 a day for the loss of Joel's care,
attention, and loss of a complete family, the number would be [$]3,650,000. If you
compensated him $20 an hour, it would be $3,504,000. If you compensated him $250 a
day, it would be $185,000. Ten dollars an hour would be $1,752,000. The medical bills,
billed amount in the lost wages, again, [$]600. We know these losses are more important.
We know we all value them greater. How much more? Four times, four times as much. If
you did that, then the number would be $2,400,000. Three times more important, that
would be $1,800,000. We ask you to . . . include in your verdict for past loss of attention,
care, and loss of a complete family, $50,000. And for the next 19 years, when the loss is
felt every day, every hour, we ask you to include money in your verdict in the amount of
$950,000." (Emphases added.)




                                              29
       Instruction No. 19 explained to the jury the damages that could be awarded on the
wrongful death claim:


               "Economic damages include:


               "1. Loss of attention, care, and loss of a complete family.


               "2. Reasonable funeral expenses.


               "For item 1, above, you should allow an amount that you believe would be
       equivalent to the benefit plaintiffs . . . could reasonably have expected to receive from the
       continued life of the deceased.


               "Noneconomic damages include:


               "1. Mental anguish, suffering, or bereavement.


               "2. Loss of Society, loss of comfort, or loss of companionship.


               "For noneconomic damages, there is no unit value and no mathematical formula
       the court can give you. You should allow an amount that you find to be fair and just
       under all the facts and circumstances." (Emphases added.)


       Defendants objected to Instruction No. 19, claiming "[i]t submits Wentling
damages. And we think under . . . Wentling and subsequent cases that evidence needs to
be presented, that was not presented in this case, to justify Wentling damages, which
would be a financial loss beyond a noneconomic loss to the parents." (Emphasis added.)
Defendants were referring to Wentling v. Medical Anesthesia Services, 237 Kan. 503,
512-13, 701 P.2d 939 (1985) (husband proved economic damages for "loss of services,
care, and guidance" from wife's death by showing closeness of the marriage, care during
husband's illness and assistance with his job, and caring for handicapped child,
                                             30
amounting to at least 98 hours per week of services, care, and guidance). The trial court
ruled the evidence by Joel's parents was sufficient to support giving Instruction No. 19.


       After trial, defendants renewed their objection, focusing on the $550,000
economic award for the "[l]oss of attention, care, and loss of a complete family" line
item. They argued they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law because there was
not competent evidence to support that award. And in a separate argument, they
contended these economic damages were excessive and resulted from passion or
prejudice, which warranted a new trial. They asked for a new trial as an alternative to
their request for judgment as a matter of law. As a final alternative, they sought remittitur
to reduce or eliminate the economic damages award because, in their view, it was not
supported by the evidence and shocked the conscience.


       Before the panel, defendants continued challenging the $550,000 award on two
grounds. First, they argued the economic damages component entitled "loss of a complete
family" in the line item did not constitute economic damages since it was
"indistinguishable from nonpecuniary damages such as loss of society, comfort or
companionship." Second, they renewed their argument that the evidence did not support a
loss of "services, counsel, guidance, financial support or anything else of an economic
nature." They framed the issue as a jury instruction challenge. They did not renew with
the panel their alternative arguments that a new trial was appropriate because the verdict
was excessive or subject to remittitur.


       Accepting this as a jury instruction issue, the panel held the insufficient evidence
question was argued to the trial court, so it was preserved for appeal. But as to the "loss
of a complete family" descriptor, the panel decided defendants did not raise that with the
district court, so it was unpreserved and subject to the clear error standard of review.
Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at 766; see also K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 60-251(d) (clear error
                                           31
standard applies when "an error in the instructions . . . has not been preserved"); In re
Thomas, 301 Kan. 841, 846, 348 P.3d 576 (2015) (To decide whether a challenged
instruction is clearly erroneous, the court "must assess whether it is firmly convinced the
jury would have reached a different verdict had the instruction error not occurred.").


       As to the sufficiency challenge, the panel rejected it, noting the evidence
established that Joel "'devoted great care to his parents, . . . engaged in numerous and
regular activities with his parents, . . . was very attentive to the needs of his parents, and
. . . was very close to his parents.'" Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at 773-74. In doing so, the
panel relied on Wentling, 237 Kan. at 512-13, as well as Huffman v. Thomas, 26 Kan.
App. 2d 685, 693, 994 P.2d 1072 (1999) (holding evidence created jury question whether
parents suffered economic damages for "loss of services, loss of attention, loss of filial
care, [and] loss of protection" from adult son's death, noting he lived at home, father and
mother were disabled, son helped around house, contributed money for household
expenses, and parents had loving relationship with son).


       As to the "loss of a complete family" descriptor, the panel agreed Instruction No.
19 was legally inappropriate as potential economic damages. Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d
at 769-70. For this, it relied on Howell v. Calvert, 268 Kan. 698, 707, 1 P.3d 310 (2000)
(holding damages for loss of "the value of a continued family relationship" and "[l]oss of
enjoyment and entertainment" were "strikingly similar to loss of society, comfort, or
companionship," which are noneconomic damages).


       Even so, the panel affirmed the $550,000 award. Applying the clear error standard,
the panel held it was not firmly convinced the jury would have awarded a different
amount without the error. The panel reasoned, "[T]he jury awarded $550,000 for 'loss of
attention, care and loss of a complete family,' [and] [g]iven that the issue was not
itemized separately, we have no means to differentiate between how the jury viewed the
                                          32
three claims or apportioned its award." Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at 770. It explained
that even though the district court should not have instructed on "loss of a complete
family" as an economic damage, the $550,000 award was not so large it should be
considered excessive or contrary to the evidence. 52 Kan. App. 2d at 771. To illustrate its
difficulty, the panel referenced this passage from Wentling:


               "'The clear error standard of review leads in most cases to affirmance of the trial
       court's determination of damages. Ordinarily, reversal will be warranted only where:
               (1) there was no evidence at all to establish the element of loss upon which the
       award in issue was based; or
               (2) the award was so patently contrary to the evidence as to shock the conscience
       of the court.'" Wentling, 237 Kan. at 511.


Standard of Review

       For jury instruction issues, we apply an analytical progression with corresponding
standards of review, which we have described as:


       "'(1) First, the appellate court should consider the reviewability of the issue from both
       jurisdiction and preservation viewpoints, exercising an unlimited standard of review; (2)
       next, the court should use an unlimited review to determine whether the instruction was
       legally appropriate; (3) then, the court should determine whether there was sufficient
       evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the defendant or the requesting party, that
       would have supported the instruction; and (4) finally, if the district court erred, the
       appellate court must determine whether the error was harmless, utilizing the test and
       degree of certainty set forth in State v. Ward, 292 Kan. 541, 256 P.3d 801 (2011) . . . .'
       [Citation omitted.]" Foster v. Klaumann, 296 Kan. 295, 301-02, 294 P.3d 223 (2013).




                                                    33
Discussion

       Defendants properly preserved their factual appropriateness challenge to the
economic loss damage item, i.e., "[l]oss of attention, care, and loss of a complete family,"
by objecting on that basis. Their legal challenge to the specific language of "loss of a
complete family" was raised for the first time on appeal.


       We must repeat that the panel's holding that it was error to allow the jury to
consider evidence of "loss of a complete family" as an economic loss item is settled for
our purposes. Given this posture, we consider the "loss of a complete family" item in the
instructions as legally inappropriate. The impact from that error will be discussed later.


       Similarly, defendants do not argue the remaining "[l]oss of attention [and] care"
language was a legally inappropriate descriptor for items of economic loss. This leaves us
to decide whether the "[l]oss of attention [and] care" descriptor as an economic loss line
item was properly submitted to the jury given the evidence, i.e., factually appropriate.


       We conclude the evidence failed to sufficiently connect the "[l]oss of attention
[and] care" claim with any evidence of a demonstrated economic character capable of
being valued under Wentling, i.e., based on the jury's common-sense understanding about
what a claimed item of actual loss costs in the marketplace. See Wentling, 237 Kan. at
514-15. We acknowledge loss of care and attention damages are properly recoverable in a
wrongful death action, but whether such losses can be characterized as economic or
noneconomic turns on the evidence. And this difficulty is particularly acute when the
claims are so generalized as they were in this case.


       A trial court must instruct only on those damages for which there is evidence to
base an award. K.S.A. 60-1903(e). K.S.A. 60-1904(a) lists nonexclusive items of

                                             34
recoverable damages: "(1) [m]ental anguish, suffering, or bereavement; (2) loss of
society, companionship, comfort or protection; (3) loss of marital care, attention, advice
or counsel; (4) loss of filial care or attention; (5) loss of parental care, training, guidance
or education; and (6) reasonable funeral expenses for the deceased."


       The statute does not distinguish between economic and noneconomic losses.
Nonetheless, K.S.A. 60-1903 provides that "damages, other than [economic] loss
sustained by an heir at law, cannot exceed in the aggregate the sum of $250,000 and
costs." Moreover, it requires that a wrongful death verdict

       "shall be itemized by the trier of fact to reflect the amounts, if any, awarded for:


               "(1) [economic] damages;


               "(2) expenses for the care of the deceased caused by the injury; and


               "(3) [economic] damages other than those itemized under subsection (c)(2)."


       The pattern jury instructions introduce Kansas juries to the required categorization
of damages as economic versus noneconomic. PIK Civ. 4th 171.02 (2016 Supp.) defines
these terms:


       "Economic loss includes loss of time or income and losses other than medical expenses
       incurred as a result of plaintiff's injuries to date (and the economic loss plaintiff is
       reasonably expected to incur in the future) [reduced to present value].


               " . . . Noneconomic loss includes pain, suffering, disabilities, disfigurement and
       any accompanying mental anguish suffered as a result of plaintiff's injuries to date (and
       the noneconomic loss plaintiff is reasonably expected to suffer in the future) [reduced to
       present value]."

                                                     35
       PIK Civ. 4th 171.32 details damages for the wrongful death of a child. It identifies
four items as economic: (1) loss of filial care, attention, or protection; (2) loss of
earnings the child would have contributed to the parents during the remainder of the
child's lifetime; (3) expenses for the deceased child's care caused by the injury; and (4)
reasonable funeral expenses. PIK recommends juries be expressly told: "For items 1 and
2 above you should allow an amount that you believe would be equivalent to the benefit
plaintiff could reasonably have expected to receive from the continued life of the
deceased." (Emphasis added.)


       PIK Civ. 4th 171.32 identifies two items as noneconomic damages: (1) mental
anguish, suffering, or bereavement; and (2) loss of society, loss of comfort, or loss of
companionship. As to these, PIK recommends the jury be further advised: "For
noneconomic damages there is no unit value and no mathematical formula the court can
give you. You should allow an amount that you find to be fair and just under all the facts
and circumstances." (Emphasis added.)


       It is noteworthy PIK Civ. 4th 171.32 distinguishes noneconomic damages as
having no unit value or mathematical formula and simply admonishes the jury to be "fair
and just under all the facts and circumstances." But for economic damages, provable
damages, i.e., "expenses," are mentioned for items 3 and 4; and items 1 and 2 are
discussed in terms of "equivalent" benefit. This distinguishes economic damages as those
that are capable of computation or conversion using some equivalence to a monetary
basis or material standard based on the marketplace. See Wentling, 237 Kan. at 514-15.
This stands in contrast to noneconomic damages, which must be understood to require
valuing based on the plaintiff's unique and personal suffering from a loss that cannot be
replaced.


                                              36
       Parents suing for the wrongful death of an adult child are not foreclosed from
claiming economic loss. "Pecuniary loss for the parent of an adult child is defined as the
care, maintenance, support, services, advice, counsel, and reasonable contributions of a
pecuniary value that the parents would, in reasonable probability, have received from
their child had the child lived." (Emphasis added.) 1 Stein on Personal Injury Damages
Treatise § 3:37 (3d ed. 2018). And our caselaw demonstrates that economic value—even
if a precise value is not readily ascertainable—is the touchstone for distinguishing
between economic and noneconomic losses. In short, economic losses are the "loss of
money or of something by which money or something of money value may be acquired."
McCart v. Muir, 230 Kan. 618, 626, 641 P.2d 384 (1982).


       Even so, our court has emphasized that losses need not be proven with
mathematical precision through experts. Wentling, 237 Kan. at 508 (rejecting argument
that wrongful death economic damages evidence must provide "monetary figures
sufficient to calculate both the value of the loss and proposed compensation"). Economic
"loss or damages in a wrongful death case should be equivalent to those [economic]
benefits or compensation that reasonably could have been expected to have resulted from
the continued life of the deceased." McCart, 230 Kan. at 626.


       "In some states there is a presumption of [economic] injury, especially those
limiting recovery to [economic] losses, in the loss of a child's society, which presumption
applies also to the death of an adult child." 1 Stein on Personal Injury Damages Treatise §
3:37 (3d ed. 2018) (citing Bullard v. Barnes, 102 Ill. 2d 505, 517, 468 N.E.2d 1228
[1984], and Ballweg v. Springfield, 114 Ill. 2d 107, 499 N.E.2d 1373 [1986]). But such a
presumption is inconsistent with Kansas caselaw. See Howell, 268 Kan. at 707 (holding
"[l]oss of the value of a continued family relationship" was not economic damage since
the item of loss was "strikingly similar to loss of society, comfort or companionship—
[noneconomic] damages"). In other words, the economic damages and their value
                                         37
claimed by Joel's parents cannot be presumed—they must be proven and be capable of
being valued.


       In Wentling, the court affirmed an economic damage award based on evidence of a
homemaker's services, care, and guidance. Notably, an expert was unable to place a
specific dollar figure on some loss items but testified the deceased's services—such as
moral, social, and educational training—"have real economic value insofar as they
contribute to a person's welfare and ability to mature, interact and obtain productive
employment in society." (Emphasis added.) Wentling, 237 Kan. at 513. And the husband
provided testimony on "the extent of services, attention, marital care, advice and
protection he was receiving from his wife, as well as the parental" services rendered and
lost. 237 Kan. at 513. In particular, the Wentling court highlighted how the husband
testified


       "in detail concerning the couple's closeness in their marriage, [decedent's] care during his
       illnesses, and even her on-site assistance at some of his construction jobs. Although [she]
       was naturally upset with her first son's handicap, she and her husband determined to keep
       the boy at home rather than place him in an institution or foster home. [She] appears to
       have been the moving force in her first son's life. She joined support groups, read
       extensively for information on Down's syndrome, spent time with the physical therapist
       for instructions on how to work with him, and attended to all the child's medical
       problems. [Her husband] testified [she] spent at least 98 hours per week providing
       services, care and guidance." (Emphases added.) 237 Kan. at 512-13.


       All parties in Wentling conceded losses for "services, care and guidance" were
"valuable per se and [economic] in nature." 237 Kan. at 514. Yet even though no actual
dollar evidence of value or estimated value was presented, the court held it was within the
jury's province to determine those losses' monetary value. 237 Kan. at 514. The court
reasoned "[t]he mere fact these items of loss, having acknowledged economic value, are

                                                   38
incapable of exact economic valuation does not mean plaintiff should be denied recovery.
The jury was capable of exercising its collective experience and judgment in this matter."
(Emphasis added.) 237 Kan. at 514. Put another way, the jurors were not being asked to
speculate, or to simply be "fair and just under all the facts and circumstances" as they
would be when valuing noneconomic damages.


       This court has said of pain and suffering, which is a noneconomic loss:


       "'Pain and suffering have no known dimensions, mathematical or financial. There is no
       exact relationship between money and physical or mental injury or suffering, and the
       various factors involved are not capable of proof in dollars and cents. For this very
       practical reason the only standard for evaluation is such amount as reasonable persons
       estimate to be fair compensation for the injuries suffered, and the law has entrusted the
       administration of this criterion to the impartial conscience and judgment of jurors, who
       may be expected to act reasonably, intelligently and in harmony with the evidence.'"
       Kansas Malpractice Victims Coalition v. Bell, 243 Kan. 333, 346, 757 P.2d 251 (1988),
       disapproved of on other grounds by Bair v. Peck, 248 Kan. 824, 811 P.2d 1176 (1991).


       The panel analogized the evidence presented by Joel's parents for loss of attention
and care to the evidence discussed in Huffman v. Thomas, 26 Kan. App. 2d 685, 994 P.2d
1072 (1999). Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at 773. In Huffman, a Court of Appeals panel
held there was sufficient evidence to support an economic damages award submitted to
the jury in five separate categories: "loss of services, loss of attention, loss of filial care,
loss of protection, and funeral expenses." Huffman, 26 Kan. App. 2d at 693. The jury was
instructed the "amount awarded . . . should be equivalent to the monetary benefits or
compensation . . . [plaintiffs] could have expected to receive." (Emphasis added.) 26 Kan.
App. 2d at 693.




                                                   39
       The Huffman panel noted:


               "[Decedent] was 22 years old. He lived at home with his parents. . . . [H]is father
       . . . is disabled and unable to work. . . . [H]is mother . . . is a double amputee. [The father]
       testified that [decedent] helped around the house and the yard, trimming and cutting
       down dead trees. [Decedent] also remodeled the family bathroom. [He] helped his mother
       by doing laundry and other household chores. He also helped her with heavy lifting and
       other tasks that [she] was unable to perform, and he contributed money for household
       expenses.

               "Both [plaintiffs] testified about their loving relationship with [decedent]. The
       family spent a lot of time together in the evenings, watching basketball and talking.
       [Plaintiffs] presented testimony from friends and neighbors who knew [decedent]. [One]
       described [decedent] as a willing, friendly, and kind person[, and] . . . a 'really caring
       person' who helped out around the house." 26 Kan. App. 2d at 692-93.


       After noting the evidence regarding specific services or contributions made around
the house in Huffman, the Burnette panel reasoned,


       "[W]ith respect to the claims for loss of attention and care, this court noted [in Huffman]
       the evidence of 'the companionship' the son provided. Specifically, this court pointed to
       evidence supporting 'the loving relationship' between the parents and their child, that
       '[t]he family spent a lot of time together,' and that the son was a 'caring person.' 26 Kan.
       App. 2d at 693." Burnette, 52 Kan. App. 2d at 773.


       The panel's reading of Huffman does not withstand scrutiny. Nothing in Huffman
suggests the panel's analysis was specifically directed at just the claims for loss of
attention and care. Rather, the Huffman panel only considered generally the defendant's
arguments that the Huffman plaintiffs had "failed to establish the nature and extent of the
[economic] damages they sustained" and that the amount awarded "was not supported by
the evidence." 26 Kan. App. 2d at 691, 693. Huffman does not stand for the proposition
                                           40
that evidence of a loving parent-child relationship, a caring disposition, or evidence of
time spent together as a family are enough to prove economic loss without something
more.


        The Huffman panel's evidence recitation could as easily be explained as showing
the jury was permitted to conclude a strong family relationship was relevant to
demonstrating a probability of future loss. See 1 Stein on Personal Injury Damages
Treatise § 3:37 (3d ed. 2018) ("The test of the right to recover is whether the fact adduced
indicates a probable willingness by the decedent and his or her ability to continue
contributions to the beneficiary in the future."). But nothing in the evidence about Joel's
close relationship and loving companionship with his parents, his attentiveness, or his
caring nature propelled the loss of care and attention claim into the realm of economic
loss—something understood as having equivalence to a monetary basis or material
standard in the marketplace.


        Though we do not intend to diminish this loss, there was no evidence establishing
more than a speculative or subjective basis for the jury to conclude Joel would have
contributed money or economically valuable services to them. Indeed, no claim for loss
services was made. And this was tellingly demonstrated by plaintiffs' closing argument
that merely offered the jury wide ranging hourly or per diem amounts as the supposed
guide for valuing the then-claimed "[l]oss of attention, care, and loss of a complete
family" line item; or suggested damages could be based on how much "more important"
the jury viewed the Burnettes' losses than Joel's medical expenses or lost wages.


        Reduced to its essence, plaintiffs simply asked the jury to be fair and just when
considering this component of their claimed economic losses, which is the same
valuation methodology used for noneconomic damages. The evidence provided nothing
on which a jury could base an economic valuation—even under Wentling's presumption
                                          41
that juries are capable of converting economic losses into their monetary equivalents on
the basis of their own experience and knowledge. Wentling, 237 Kan. 503, Syl. ¶ 1.


       The economic damages in Wentling were supported by evidence about actual
services lost, which were understood to be of the type capable of being purchased, e.g.,
providing in-home, rather than out-of-home, care for a disabled child; or things that
would have otherwise economically benefitted plaintiffs, e.g., guidance that would have
contributed to the child's ability to obtain future employment. But there was no loss of
services claim by Joel's parents. And the evidence presented about actual losses from
Joel's death did not establish—or even reference—any economic dimension. The jury had
nothing to associate the loss of care and attention claim to some reasonable basis for
monetary computation or equivalence to enable it to arrive at an economic loss recovery.


       Given this, it becomes readily apparent this item of loss was indistinguishable
from those for which the jury was permitted to award noneconomic damages under the
jury instruction defining those to include "[l]oss of society, loss of comfort, or loss of
companionship." And the jury gave Joel's parents all they asked for in noneconomic
damages.


       Accordingly, Instruction No. 19 was factually inappropriate in that it permitted the
jury to award economic damages for loss of care and attention without evidentiary
support and it was error under these facts to include this item as a separate verdict form
entry apart from nonpecuniary damages. Cf. Leiker v. Gafford, 245 Kan. 325, 340, 778
P.2d 823 (1989) (holding loss of enjoyment of life is not an independent category of
nonpecuniary damages and, therefore, separate instruction or separate verdict form entry
on the item was error), overruled on other grounds by Martindale v. Tenny, 250 Kan.
621, 829 P.2d 561 (1992).


                                              42
       Having concluded the instruction was both legally inappropriate because of the
"loss of a complete family" descriptor based on the panel's decision and factually
inappropriate because of the evidence presented, we must also conclude these errors were
not harmless. Admittedly, this analysis is complicated because we are facing two errors,
only one of which is preserved, making the standards of review different. But because
these errors together mean it was error to submit this as an item of economic loss, the
misclassification cannot withstand any test for harmlessness.


       In short, K.S.A. 60-1903(c) requires a verdict to be itemized to reflect
noneconomic and economic damages. Instruction No. 19 inappropriately identified "loss
of a complete family" as economic damages, and the evidence at trial did not support the
remaining instruction classifying the "[l]oss of attention [and] care" claim as an economic
one. Absent these jury instruction errors, we conclude the jury would not have awarded
$550,000 as economic damages under the line items for past and future "[l]oss of
attention, care, and loss of a complete family." It would not have had the option to do so.
These errors were not harmless.


       The appropriate remedy is to reverse and vacate the $550,000 award only as to
these losses because the jury lacked an evidentiary basis to award damages for this line
item. See Wackman v. Rubsamen, 602 F.3d 391, 408 (5th Cir. 2010) (reversing portion of
the jury's damage award because plaintiffs failed to produce evidence to support any
damages for the challenged item); Rosario v. City of Union City Police Dept., 263 F.
Supp. 2d 874 (D. N.J. 2003) (vacating wrongful death damages under scheme that
permitted recovery only for pecuniary loss when evidence failed to supply jury with
adequate basis to value the claimed losses); Carrano v. Yale-New Haven Hosp., 279
Conn. 622, 653, 661, 904 A.2d 149 (2006) (holding evidence insufficient to permit jury
to find plaintiff suffered economic loss due to loss of decedent's disability income when
evidence failed to establish such income exceeded decedent's expenses, reversing
                                           43
judgment, and remanding for new judgment in amount excluding economic loss); Horner
v. Sani-Top, Inc., 143 Idaho 230, 237, 141 P.3d 1099 (2006) (holding evidence
insufficient to support award for loss of financial support from decedent, and trial court
erred denying motion to alter or amend judgment to eliminate the award).


       The district court's judgment with respect to liability is affirmed. Its judgment with
respect to the $550,000 challenged economic damages is reversed and vacated. The case
is remanded for judgment to be entered consistent with this decision.




                                             44
