Skier’s rib injuries suggest Paltrow ran into him, trial hears
The David-versus-Goliath contours of Gwyneth Paltrow’s ski collision trial began to take shape on Wednesday morning when doctors of a man she collided with at a Utah ski resort in 2016 testified about the broken ribs and lasting brain damage he sustained in the crash.
“After his accident, he deteriorated abruptly. And many of the activities that he used to do, he stopped doing,” a radiologist testified about Terry Sanderson, the 76-year-old suing Paltrow over the crash.
Dr. Wendell Gibby said brain images suggested it was unlikely that Sanderson crashed into Paltrow. The head trauma was likely caused by a skier crashing into Sanderson, and the lasting effects on Sanderson’s overall health were consistent with the severity of the collision, Gibby said.
“The rib fractures certainly corroborate that there was enough force to cause a head injury,” Gibby said.
Another doctor and two family members were also expected to testify on Wednesday in a trial about a 2016 ski crash between Paltrow and Sanderson, who claims her recklessness left him with lasting injuries and brain damage. After a judge threw out Sanderson’s earlier $3.1 million lawsuit (all figures U.S.) and ruled that he wasn’t entitled to punitive damages, Sanderson amended his claims and now alleges damages of “more than $300,000.”
The money sought pales in comparison to the typical legal costs of a multi-year lawsuit and expert witness-heavy trial. More than a dozen are expected to testify throughout the eight-day trial in Park City, a posh ski town known for welcoming celebrities each year for the Sundance Film Festival.
In a counterclaim to Sanderson’s amended lawsuit, Paltrow is seeking $1 and attorney fees — a familiar, symbolic action that highlights how reputation, not money, is often what’s at stake for celebrities at trial like Paltrow. Taylor Swift similarly countersued a radio host for the same symbolic amount in 2017.
Though the court is not publishing a witness list for the celebrity trial, lawyers said after Gibby that a neuropsychologist, and Sanderson’s daughters Shae Herath and Polly Grasham would likely be called to testify Wednesday.
Sanderson’s lawyers left the possibility open they might call Paltrow to the stand depending on when others expected to testify arrive in Park City. Paltrow will likely testify Friday, and her children Moses and Apple are also expected to testify, her lawyer said.
Both parties blame the other for the collision and claim they were crashed into from behind, relying on a little-known Utah law stipulating that whoever is downhill has the right of way when skiing and snowboarding.
Paltrow’s attorneys have pled with Judge Kent Holmberg to grant special restrictions throughout the actor-turned-wellness tycoon’s trial, including limiting photography both in the courtroom and in the public parking lot outside, where a rope cordons off Paltrow’s entrance and exit paths.
On the opening day of the trial, Paltrow used a blue notebook to shield her face from view when entering and exiting the courtroom.
The trial is expected to hinge on how the 10 jurors — six women and four men — interpret evidence from medical experts, and whether they see Sanderson’s injuries as directly related to the accident or a normal progression of an aging man.
Paltrow’s attorneys cautioned the jury not to be biased by feeling pity for Sanderson. They called his story “utter B.S.”