Collins v. Dilcher

450 P.2d 679, 104 Ariz. 221, 1969 Ariz. LEXIS 242
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1969
Docket8544
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 450 P.2d 679 (Collins v. Dilcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Dilcher, 450 P.2d 679, 104 Ariz. 221, 1969 Ariz. LEXIS 242 (Ark. 1969).

Opinion

McFarland, justice.

Plaintiffs James Dilcher and his wife Billie Dilcher, hereinafter referred to as Dilcher or plaintiffs, sued defendants Jack Collins and Collins Cars, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Collins or defendants, for damages. The complaint was in three counts: slander, conversion of an automobile, and assault and battery. A jury brought in a verdict in favor of plaintiffs on each count against the defendants Jack Collins, individually, Jack Collins dba Collins Cars, and Collins Cars, Inc., a corporation. Defendants have appealed.

The facts indicate that plaintiffs bought a 1958 Ford at defendants’ car lot for $1295 and received from Chuck Ellis, defendants’ manager, a receipt for payment in full. Chuck Ellis left Collins’s employ without turning over the money for the Ford. About six weeks later, plaintiffs returned to the car lot and requested some repairs pursuant to an alleged warranty, advising Collins that they were going to go back east on their vacation.

Collins testified that he had no knowledge of the sale. At this point he still had the certificate of title to the car. He failed to recognize that any wrong done to him had been done by his former employee, Ellis, and not by plaintiffs. Collins attempted to seize the car in order to protect himself. . He told plaintiffs to take the car to Read Mullan’s shop for the needed repairs, sent two of his employees named Strain and Perry along with plaintiffs, and he himself followed them in his car.

Collins decided to get help from the police in preventing plaintiffs from retaining possession of the car. He ordered Strain to call the police and to tell them that plaintiffs were driving a stolen car. He later admitted that he also knew plaintiffs did not steal it, but that he knew the police would not come to help him straighten out a mere argument over the unpaid price, and so had requested Strain to report that the car had been stolen.

While waiting for the police, Mrs. Dilcher attempted to drive the car away, and Collins attempted to prevent her from doing so. They scuffled over the keys, and over her right to get in the car and drive off. Collins had the driveway blocked by another vehicle and Mrs. Dilcher drove off a 14-inch curb in attempting to get the car off the lot. This caused the car to “hang up”. She got out, went back to the garage and fainted. She suffered some minor injuries not readily visible. She claimed that the injuries were inflicted upon her by Collins in the melee; he claimed that if she had any injury it was suffered in the attempt to drive the car over the curb. She was taken to Memorial Hospital by ambulance. The police officer who came in answer to the “stolen car” report examined Mrs. Dilcher before she left in the ambulance.

Collins testified that after the police arrived he learned that Mr. and Mrs. Dilcher had receipts for $900 for the purchase of the car; that the police showed him the receipts which he stated were reported to be signed by Mr. Ellis. Collins exhibited his title certificate and the officer decided to give him possession of the car. It contained some personal effects of *223 plaintiffs. The jury’s verdicts were as follows :

For conversion of the car and contents, $1429.85 plus $8,000 punitive damages; For assault and battery, $64.95 plus $2,-000 punitive damages;
For slander, $750 plus $4,000 punitive damages.

The defendants contend that the court erred in denying their motion for new trial based on the misconduct of plaintiffs’ counsel in the closing argument. The plaintiffs contend the statements were taken out of context and that counsel was justified in making them because of the statements made by defendants’ counsel in his argument. Defendants’ counsel’s argument was not made a part of the record on appeal, so we cannot now pass on this question.

While this case was evidently fought hard by both sides, some of the statements made by counsel for plaintiffs would indicate that he went beyond the bounds of strict propriety. However, no timely and proper objection was made by defendants’ counsel. In spite of the fact that he interrupted the argument on several occasions to object to statements of opposing counsel, he did not object to any of the statements of counsel which he now contends was error, nor did he ask for a mistrial, until after the verdict was rendered and a motion for a new trial had been filed. At that time it was too late. In Bruno v. San Xavier Rock and Sand Co., 76 Ariz. 250, 263 P.2d 308, we said:

“ ‘ * * * if appellant deemed the argument so prejudicial as that neither an explanation or withdrawal by counsel, nor an instruction by the court, would have rendered the argument harmless, request should have been made to withdraw the case from the jury and discharge the panel. We do not think a litigant should be permitted to lie in wait, take chances on a favorable verdict and, being disappointed, sally from ambush and, for the first time, complain of an improper argument in the motion for a new trial.’ ”

In the case of Beliak v. Plants, 93 Ariz. 266, 379 P.2d 976, we said:

“It is asserted generally that defendant’s-argument, ‘among other things, consisted of accusations, wholly unwarranted by the evidence, that the plaintiff, his family, his witnesses and his counsel misrepresented evidence and presented false evidence in order to fraudulently deceive the jury.’ We think the answer to this assignment lies in the fact that the plaintiff did not make an objection to the argument before the case went to the jury. Misconduct in the closing argument was first raised in the trial court on plaintiff’s motion for new trial. Our announced rule is that unless misconduct is so serious that no admonishment could undo the damage, the failure to make timely objection is a waiver of error.” 93 Ariz. at pp. 268, 269, 379 P.2d at p. 978.

Since plaintiffs did not raise these questions before a motion for new trial, they have waived them and, as we have repeatedly held, we will not give a litigant a second chance to win on an error which was not called to the trial court’s attention in time to permit its correction.

Defendant also contends that the court in giving the instruction on slander “completely neglected to include the necessity of a finding of publication to others of the words alleged to be slanderous.” Counsel for defendants made the following exception to the instruction on slander:

“Defendant excepts to this one, your Honor, It’s our position that as to the matter of driving a stolen car, the instruction here is erroneous. It’s our position that not only must the words have been heard but in slander of this nature that you also have to show the effect of the words on the people hearing them, not only that they would reasonably understand them to mean the plaintiffs had *224 stolen the car. We do not feel the instruction is a correct statement of law.”

Counsel for defendant states that the instruction seemingly originated in Conard v. Dillingham, 23 Ariz. 596, 206 P.

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Bluebook (online)
450 P.2d 679, 104 Ariz. 221, 1969 Ariz. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-dilcher-ariz-1969.