Movita Sanchez v. Geico Indemnity Company

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 22, 2019
Docket18-1338
StatusPublished

This text of Movita Sanchez v. Geico Indemnity Company (Movita Sanchez v. Geico Indemnity Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Movita Sanchez v. Geico Indemnity Company, (Fla. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D18-1338 _____________________________

MOVITA SANCHEZ,

Appellant,

v.

GEICO INDEMNITY COMPANY,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Walton County. Jeffrey E. Lewis, Judge.

July 22, 2019

JAY, J.

We have for review the trial court’s order granting GEICO Indemnity Company’s motion for new trial. Relying on Matarranz v. State, 133 So. 3d 473 (Fla. 2013), and Singer v. State, 109 So. 2d 7 (Fla. 1959), the trial court concluded it applied the incorrect standard in denying GEICO’s motion to remove a juror for cause. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

Movita Sanchez sued GEICO for damages caused by a motor vehicle accident that occurred on November 19, 2012. The issues of negligence and causation were settled between the parties, but a jury trial was held to determine the amount of damages. At the stage of jury selection, it was revealed that the venire contained two prospective jurors—numbers 13 and 17—each of whom bore the surname of “Johnson.” During voir dire, counsel for plaintiff Sanchez, Mr. Wesley, asked the members of the venire if any of them had brought a lawsuit against their own insurance company. The following exchange took place between Mr. Wesley and juror 13:

MR. WESLEY: Anyone else ever had to bring a lawsuit against their own insurance company?

Mr. Johnson?

[JUROR 13]: Yes.

MR. WESLEY: Tell me about that, sir.

[JUROR 13]: This was in the 80s. I don’t remember much of it. I was rear ended. I filed a claim.

MR. WESLEY: Okay. Did you bring a claim against your insurance company, or did you bring [a] claim against the person who rear ended you, or do you remember?

[JUROR 13]: My insurance company.

MR. WESLEY: Okay. Under an uninsured motorist coverage?

[JUROR 13]: The driver was insured.

MR. WESLEY: Regardless of who the claim may have been against, were you satisfied with that process?

[JUROR 13]: Um . . .

MR. WESLEY: Pregnant pause. It sounds like you may not have been – exactly happy with the process or totally satisfied with the result. Is that fair?

[JUROR 13]: Well I’m still suffering from the injuries so –

2 MR. WESLEY: You still have injuries or symptoms that were, are related to that accident?

[JUROR 13]: Right.

MR. WESLEY: Do you still receive treatment?

[JUROR 13]: No.

MR. WESLEY: Just something you deal with?

MR. WESLEY: Along the same lines of the question I asked – do you believe like you were made whole or that you received everything that you were owed as a result of that accident?

MR. WESLEY: No? Thank you, Mr. Johnson.

Later on, juror 13 responded to Mr. Wesley’s additional questions as follows:

MR. WESLEY: Anybody else in the panel – anybody else have concerns about starting everybody off even? Does anybody feel like they are not able to do [sic]? That they are already leaning one way or the other – Mr. Johnson?

[JUROR 13]: I am leaning towards the plaintiff.

MR. WESLEY: Okay. What gives you that lean?

[JUROR 13]: I have a fiancée that is involved in a personal injury case at this time with Geico.

MR. WESLEY: Okay. Is that a case where Geico is the uninsured motorist carrier, meaning her insurance company or is that the other driver?

[JUROR 13]: It is her insurance company.

3 MR. WESLEY: Your fiancée is in a case with Geico currently?

MR. WESLEY: Does something about that case cause you not to be fair and impartial here?

[JUROR 13]: That’s correct.

MR. WESLEY: Again, not having heard any evidence so far, do you believe going into the case, you would already be somewhat leaning on this side as opposed to on Geico?

MR. WESLEY: All right. Thank you, sir. I appreciate that.

(Emphasis added.)

The parties’ attorneys then voiced their challenges for cause. Mr. Wesley was successful in challenging for cause juror 17—the other Mr. Johnson—because during voir dire, and obverse to juror 13’s sentiment, juror 17 expressed a bias in favor of GEICO. Counsel for GEICO, however, did not seek to have juror 13 removed for cause due to his expressed bias against GEICO.

Counsel next exercised their peremptory strikes. GEICO’s attorney, Mr. Martin, utilized all of his peremptory strikes. The trial court then listed the jurors to be empaneled: “This would be 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 13, and 15 would be our alternate.” Both sides agreed to the jury. The trial court did not, however, place the jury under oath; instead, it called a recess for lunch.

Apparently, during the lunch recess, something or someone jogged Mr. Martin’s memory that there were two Messrs. Johnson in the venire. He recognized the potentially dire consequences to his defense of his having conflated the two Johnsons—jurors 13 and 17—which would result in juror 13 being seated on the jury. Accordingly, upon his return to the courtroom and as soon as the

4 judge inquired if there was anything that needed to be brought up before the jury was brought back in, Mr. Martin responded:

MR. MARTIN: Yes, Your Honor. And I preface this by apologizing to the Court and to plaintiff’s counsel, but it was brought to my attention over the lunch hour that I made a mistake during the jury selection process. I got the two jurors, Johnson, Juror Number 13 . . . and Juror Number 17, Johnson mixed up in my head.

I should have moved to strike . . . Juror Number 13, for cause. The reason being that . . . Juror Number 13, stated that he had a lawsuit against his own insurance company in the 1980s. He was still suffering from that. He was leaning towards the plaintiff. He was not satisfied with the result of his prior claim, and his current fiancée is currently involved in a personal injury lawsuit against Geico.

The Juror Number 17 . . . was struck for cause. And I conflated the two of them in my mind and didn’t think to move for cause for [Juror Number 13]. He is currently seated at Juror Number 6 in our panel. For that reason, I’m compelled, I believe, to move to strike Juror Number 13 . . . for cause and proceed with Juror Number 15 . . . who’s currently the alternate, as the sixth juror on the panel.

And again, I apologize for my error, but I – I feel like I have to make that motion at this point.

Mr. Wesley objected to Mr. Martin’s challenge for cause, claiming that juror 13’s answers did not constitute sufficient bias to justify the challenge. He also claimed he would have used his peremptory strikes differently had juror 13 been removed for cause.

Mr. Martin countered by pointing out that Mr. Wesley had used his last peremptory strike before Mr. Martin had exhausted his own, and he (Mr. Martin) could have “back struck Juror

5 Number 13 . . . with [a] peremptory.” Mr. Martin explained that because Mr. Wesley’s peremptory strikes had been exhausted, “Mr. Wesley would not have been able to make any additional changes to the panel” if Mr. Martin had back struck juror 13. He therefore urged that the only harm presented was the risk of proceeding with no alternate juror. Mr. Martin then repeated his request that juror 13 be removed from the jury for cause and the alternate juror be seated as a regular juror on the panel.

Acknowledging that his own notes of juror 13’s answers indicated “some potential bias” on the juror’s part, the trial judge determined to question him on his ability to be fair.

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Movita Sanchez v. Geico Indemnity Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/movita-sanchez-v-geico-indemnity-company-fladistctapp-2019.