Hodge v. Lott

553 S.E.2d 652, 251 Ga. App. 288, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2577, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 937
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 8, 2001
DocketA01A1247
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 553 S.E.2d 652 (Hodge v. Lott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodge v. Lott, 553 S.E.2d 652, 251 Ga. App. 288, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2577, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 937 (Ga. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Eldridge, Judge.

Sedrick Demon Hodge and Calvin Lanier Harrell were held to be jointly liable in damages by a jury verdict for a motor vehicle collision that occurred on August 2, 1997, injuring Jerry L. Lott. Harrell settled with the plaintiff. Hodge, the defendant, moved for a new trial on general grounds and the special grounds that the trial court abused its discretion in not removing a juror who failed to disclose her relationship with an employee of counsel for Harrell. The motion for new trial was denied. On appeal, defendant asserts that the trial court abused its discretion in several ways: in allowing a hypothetical question to plaintiff’s treating physician; in limiting cross-examination of the plaintiff regarding pain prior to the collision in a pre-existing condition, revealed during prior treatment; and in not removing a juror after a relationship to counsel for the other defendant became known. Finding no merit to defendant’s contentions, we affirm.

The plaintiff’s injuries were soft tissue and a compression fracture of his spine. Defendant sought to show either that the compression fracture pre-existed the collision or that plaintiff failed to prove that the collision caused the compression fracture.

At trial, plaintiff testified that in 1980 he had worked as a dry wall installer; that he quit work in 1980 because of a work-caused back injury; and that he had not worked since that date because of this back injury. When plaintiff was on cross-examination by Hodge’s counsel, counsel sought to question him by use of a medical record *289 regarding a pre-collision hospital admission from March 22 through 27, 1997, in which plaintiff complained of symptoms of back pain. Plaintiff objected that such, opinions as to limited range of motion, stated in the leading question medical diagnosis and opinion not supported by evidence in the record and were not medical history admissible as a hearsay exception. The trial court sustained the objection, and defense counsel abandoned this line of inquiry.

At the end of trial, the failure of a juror to reveal on voir dire that she was the aunt of an employee of Harrell’s counsel was revealed to the trial court by defendant. The trial court had the juror voir dired to determine the relationship with the other defendant’s counsel and whether the juror could be fair and impartial to all parties despite being related to an employee of defense counsel under the facts and circumstances of the case. Having determined that the juror could be impartial and after properly instructing the juror, the trial court did not remove the juror but allowed the juror to continue to serve over objection of plaintiff’s counsel; no objection was made by the defendant.

1. Defendant contends that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing a hypothetical question put to Dr. Homback to be answered.

Defendant’s objection was made on the videotaped deposition only and was not preserved for appellate review anywhere else. In the defendant’s brief, he states his objection that the hypothetical did not provide sufficient information for the expert to respond and that the hypothetical had no foundation in regard to any personal information of the physician as having had the same feelings.

Such objection appears nowhere in either the record or the trial transcript. Defendant failed to cite to the record or transcript where this specific objection was preserved for this Court’s review of the exact wording of this objection in violation of Court of Appeals Rule 27 (c) (3) (i). Prior to trial, the trial court denied this objection without reciting the objection so that this Court would have the objection before us for review.

Either as a portion of the pretrial order submitted by the defendant, as a motion in limine, or as a stipulation at pretrial hearing made into a transcript, this objection to the deposition should have been preserved and submitted for decision in writing into the record. In the alternative, the original video deposition, unedited, should have been filed in the record on appeal. Defendant directed that the clerk omit nothing on appeal to no avail, because the objection was contained in the unfiled and unedited videotaped deposition that was not read to the jury. The edited version of the deposition, with the overruled objection deleted, was played at trial for the jury and was transcribed by the court reporter as part of the trial transcript, which *290 was filed with the clerk. Thus, after the court ruled on the objection as a pretrial matter, the objection was edited out of the deposition presented at trial to the jury so that the objection was not preserved as a part of the transcript of the evidence. Therefore, although timely made and ruled upon by the trial court, the objection was not preserved for appellate review by this Court.

When a party makes an objection but fails to have such objection preserved upon either the record or transcript of the evidence, such objection is not preserved for review, because this Court has nothing before it to review. In the absence of either record or transcript, this Court must presume the correctness of the ruling by the trial court. Camaron v. State, 246 Ga. App. 80, 82 (1) (539 SE2d 577) (2000). “When a portion of the record is not before this court which is necessary for our determination of one or more of the appellate issues raised, an affirmance as to those issues must result.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Ogles v. State, 218 Ga. App. 92 (1) (a) (460 SE2d 866) (1995); see accord Burritt v. Media Marketing Svcs., 242 Ga. App. 92, 94-95 (3) (527 SE2d 890) (2000).

2. Defendant contends that the trial court abused its discretion “in limiting the cross-examination of the plaintiff concerning complaints of pain made by the plaintiff during medical treatment prior to the automobile accident in issue.” However, defendant failed to properly preserve this exception to the trial court’s ruling.

Defense counsel asked: “And during that, you had a physical examination where you — they tested your range of motion of your back and you were having some pain with that, and you could flex your trunk only forty degrees before you had pain, and you could extend it only ten degrees. . . .” Plaintiff’s counsel objected: “I’m going to object to this. He’s reading diagnosis and opinions of physicians he has not called as witnesses. This is not his medical history.”

Defense counsel did not deny that he was reading the physician’s opinion as to the range of motion as the predicate for the question and this physician had not been called to testify or that those expert opinions as to range of motion were not in the record already as evidence from any expert. After the trial court sustained the objection, defense counsel abandoned this line of inquiry without perfecting the record by making an offer of proof as to the relevance, materiality, admissibility of such evidence, and harm shown by the exclusion; nor did defense counsel show what the anticipated answer would be. See Anderson v. Jarriel, 224 Ga. 495, 496 (3) (162 SE2d 322) (1968); Hendrix v. Byers Bldg. Supply, 167 Ga. App. 878, 880 (2) (307 SE2d 759) (1983).

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Bluebook (online)
553 S.E.2d 652, 251 Ga. App. 288, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2577, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodge-v-lott-gactapp-2001.