Baxter v. Surgical Clinic of Anniston, P.A.
Decision Date | 26 September 1986 |
Citation | 495 So.2d 652 |
Parties | William H. BAXTER v. The SURGICAL CLINIC OF ANNISTON, P.A. 85-183. |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
Ronald L. Allen of Merrill, Merrill, Mathews & Allen, Anniston, William W. Smith, S. Shay Samples of Hogan, Smith, Alspaugh, Samples & Pratt, Birmingham, for appellant.
W. Stancil Starnes of Starnes & Atchison, Randal H. Sellers, Birmingham, for appellee.
William H. Baxter, a medical malpractice Plaintiff, appealing a judgment based upon an adverse jury verdict, presents three issues for review:
1. Whether the Court properly refused the Plaintiff an opportunity, during voir dire proceedings, to examine members of the jury venire as to insurance-related employment.
2. Whether the Court correctly instructed the jury that a verdict could affect the license of Dr. Lewis Sellers.
3. Whether the court properly charged the jury by way of supplemental instructions when the jury requested additional guidance during deliberations.
Baxter complains that the trial court's grant of Defendant's pre-trial motion in limine to restrict his voir dire examination of jurors on matters relating to insurance effectively precluded the following inquiry:
"Whether any of the members of the panel or members of their immediate family are employed by an insurance company or have ever been employed by an insurance company and in what capacity and if, in fact, they acknowledged that they have been employed by an insurance company, to question them further as to whether they can fairly decide this case based on the facts."
The Defendant/Appellee counters by asserting that the questions were either improper or, if proper, that the trial court's adverse rulings were not preserved for appellate review. Because the briefs of the respective parties are not altogether clear, at best, or present materially different versions of the trial proceedings, at worst, we have gone to the record for a clearer understanding of the posture in which this issue arose. Immediately before the trial began, Defendant made an oral motion in limine: The court responded: The trial judge then made it clear that his purpose in granting Defendant's motion in limine was to restrict the scope of Plaintiff's inquiry concerning insurance.
Just before the voir dire process began, Plaintiff's lawyer orally requested that the court inquire of the jurors concerning certain matters of insurance, as set out above. The court in its voir dire examination included the following questions:
Defendant, citing Liberty National Insurance Company v. Beasley, 466 So.2d 935 (Ala.1985), insists that, because Plaintiff failed to further object and assign grounds therefor, or in some manner call to the trial court's attention his failure to inquire of the jurors concerning the broader information relating to insurance as earlier requested, Plaintiff cannot now seek review of the trial court's action.
We hold that the issue is properly before this Court. Beasley involved the denial of a motion in limine to preclude the adverse party from introducing certain evidence. The subject evidence was introduced at trial without objection. This Court held that, unless the trial judge indicated to the contrary, he could not be held to have waived his right to further review the issue of admission when the evidence was offered at trial. When the trial judge denies a motion to exclude evidence, made in limine, unless he clearly indicates to the contrary, it is the legal equivalent to an announcement that he reserves the right to rule on the subject evidence at the time of its offer, and is not a final ruling made in a pre-trial context.
For obvious reasons, the same result does not obtain where the motion in limine is granted. In this instance, the nonmoving party, by virtue of the adverse ruling, is precluded from taking some proposed or anticipated action. To further pursue the very course of action he is now restrained from pursuing is itself violative of the court's ruling and thus such pursuit is not required to preserve for review the trial court's action.
Although, in the instant case, the trial judge indicated that he would accept any proffered voir dire question and make his ruling at that time, it was clear from the outset that counsel for the respective parties and the court understood the underlying issue. Plaintiff wished to have the voir dire examination include broader inquiries as to insurance (any insurance company), while Defendant wanted the inquiry limited to the liability carrier concerned in the case (Mutual Assurance Society of Alabama). In granting the Defendant's motion, the trial court elected not only to conduct the voir dire examination...
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...order against prejudicial questions, statements, and evidence." Id. at 393, 667 P.2d at 826; see also Baxter v. Surgical Clinic of Anniston, P.A., 495 So.2d 652, 654 (Ala.1986) ("When the trial judge denies a motion to exclude evidence, made in limine, unless he clearly indicates to the con......
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