Country Insurance v. Agricultural Development, Inc.

695 P.2d 346, 107 Idaho 961, 1984 Ida. LEXIS 574
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1984
Docket15296
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 695 P.2d 346 (Country Insurance v. Agricultural Development, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Country Insurance v. Agricultural Development, Inc., 695 P.2d 346, 107 Idaho 961, 1984 Ida. LEXIS 574 (Idaho 1984).

Opinions

BISTLINE, Justice.

I.

Country Insurance Company, in its statement of issues presented raises the sole contention that the trial court committed prejudicial error in revising a special verdict after the jury instruction conference where the trial court did not thereafter give counsel an opportunity to read and consider said revision and register objections thereto. The giving of the revised special verdict is not itself assigned as error.

The main theme of the appeal is set forth in Country Insurance’s brief as follows:

Archer and Taylor[1] can be distinguished from this case in a number of ways:

(1) In Archer and Taylor, I.R.C.P. 51 provided in part:

“At the close of the evidence or at such time as the court reasonably directs or permits, any party may file written requests that the court instruct the jury on the law as set forth in the requests. The court shall rule upon said requests, and may also prepare other written instructions to be given of its own motion, and shall submit to the parties the instructions that will be given, and provide opportunity to make objections. The failure to object to any instruction given by the court shall not preclude any party to the action from assigning as error on appeal any erroneous instruction given, not requested by such party, or any omission by the court to give a proper instruction ____” (Emphasis added.)

I.R.C.P. 51 was subsequently amended in 1975, wherein the prior provision:

“The failure to object to any instruction given by the Court shall not preclude any party to the action from assigning as error on appeal any erroneous instruction given or any omission by the court to give the proper instruction,” was stricken and a mandatory requirement was added that counsel must object to the instructions that will be given by the Court and the failure to make an objection on the record precludes raising the issue on appeal.

In Briscoe v. Nishitani, 105 Idaho 175, 667 P.2d 278 (Ct.App.1983), the Idaho Court of Appeals stated:

“Preliminarily, we note that objections to giving, or failing to give, jury [963]*963instructions, and the court’s ruling thereon at the close of evidence at the trial, must be made a part of the record. I.R.C.P. 51(a)(1). Failure to make an objection on the record precludes raising the issue on appeal. Quincy v. Joint School District No. 41, Benewah County, 102 Idaho 764, 640 P.2d 304 (1981). Stoddard v. Nelson, 99 Idaho 293, 581 P.2d 339 (1978).”

Accordingly, in Archer and Taylor, the prejudicial effect of the failure to submit instructions to the parties for review and objections prior to instructing the jury, was cured by the language in the then Rule 51 which provided that the “failure to object to any instruction given by the court shall not preclude any party to the action from assigning as error on appeal any erroneous instruction given.” Therefore, prior to 1975, the failure to provide instructions to counsel, and the corresponding failure of counsel to object to the instructions to be given, did not prejudice counsel from raising the issue of erroneous or improper instructions on appeal.

However, subsequent to 1975, the failure to object to instructions given by the trial court, prior to instructing the jury, precludes raising the issue on appeal. The trial court altered and revised the original Special Verdict without the knowledge, participation or consent of counsel, and gave the altered Special Verdict to the Jury without giving counsel an opportunity to review or object to the altered Special Verdict. Technically, no objection having been made on the record thereto, Country Insurance is now precluded on appeal from raising any issue regarding the altered Special Verdict, to its extreme prejudice.

Appellant’s Brief, pp. 16-18.

As pointed out above, Country Insurance, believing that it was precluded, has not assigned as an issue on appeal that there was prejudicial error other than in not displaying the revised version to counsel in order that objection could be made. Unfortunately, however, Country Insurance is in error on its underlying declaration that such preclusion has been the rule at all times subsequent to 1975. Correctly picking up on the change in the rule as it had existed at the time of Archer and Taylor by an amendment made effective January 1, 1975,2 Country Insurance then fails to observe the further amendment made by order dated July 2, 1976, effective October 1, 1976. That 1976 amendment completely removed the sentence which is set out in footnote 2. A further amendment made to the rule on May 25, 1977, with an effective date of July 1, 1977, did not reinstate the language deleted by the 1976 amendment, but only continued the requirement of instruction conferences, and changed the existing last sentence of I.R.C.P. 51(a) to read that “All objections thereto, and any objections to the giving or the failure to give an instruction, and any court’s ruling thereon, must be made a part of the record.” Insofar as the argument here is concerned, the rule for almost eight years has not required the making of objections as a condition precedent to assigning error.

As noted in the above excerpt from its brief, Country Insurance in this Court relies heavily on a Court of Appeals case3 i preference to a more close reading' of Rule 51(a). The statement in that case, that “Failure to make an objection on the record precludes raising the issue on appeal,” was thought by the Court of Appeals to be supported by Quincy, supra, and [964]*964Stoddard, supra. In Quincy, there was no question about some general instructions which the trial judge gave in accordance with his custom of giving some general instructions in advance of opening statements. The judge offered an opportunity to object to the intended procedure, but no objection was made; the appellant in that case did not request time to review the instructions. The appellant having acquiesced at a time when he could have done otherwise, the holding of this Court was, not that he could not challenge such instructions on appeal, but that he could not challenge that procedure as error on appeal. In a similar situation, although a criminal case, we stated in State v. Watson, 99 Idaho 694, 701, 587 P.2d 835, 842 (1978): “Where a trial court inadvertently or even purposefully imposes on either party or both a variation in procedure, there yet remains an obligation to make a timely objection.”4 The Court of Appeals also cited Stoddard, supra, as support for its statement in Briscoe. In stating that the appellants in Stoddard were precluded from raising on appeal any issue of alleged error in the instructions, this Court, by footnotes 1 and 4 and in the text itself, made it clear that the rule as then applicable required the making of objections in the trial court in order to preserve the question for appellate rule. Accordingly, the statement in Briscoe

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Country Insurance v. Agricultural Development, Inc.
695 P.2d 346 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
695 P.2d 346, 107 Idaho 961, 1984 Ida. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/country-insurance-v-agricultural-development-inc-idaho-1984.