Osborne v. Mollman Water Conditioning, Inc.

2003 OK CIV APP 20, 65 P.3d 632, 74 O.B.A.J. 999, 2002 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 140, 2002 WL 32058312
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 17, 2002
Docket96,526
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2003 OK CIV APP 20 (Osborne v. Mollman Water Conditioning, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne v. Mollman Water Conditioning, Inc., 2003 OK CIV APP 20, 65 P.3d 632, 74 O.B.A.J. 999, 2002 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 140, 2002 WL 32058312 (Okla. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Opinion by

JOE C. TAYLOR, Presiding Judge.

¶ 1 Plaintiff, LeEtta Osborne, appeals from a judgment on a jury verdict against her in an automobile accident case. The jury found Plaintiffs contributory negligence was greater than the combined negligence of all Defendants, resulting in no recovery by Plaintiff. There are two issues on appeal: (1) whether the trial court committed reversible error by allowing each Defendant to exercise three peremptory challenges when Plaintiff was limited to three such challenges; and (2) whether the trial court erred in refusing to allow Plaintiff to present as a rebuttal witness an accident reconstruction expert. Based on our review of the record, the parties’ briefs, and the applicable law, we find that the trial court did not err and affirm the judgment.

Facts

¶ 2 This lawsuit arose from a multiple vehicle collision on Interstate 40 near downtown OMahoma City on June 19, 1997. Plaintiff and four other vehicles were traveling east on Interstate 40, when traffic congestion triggered a chain reaction collision that spread across all three lanes of traffic. The motorists involved in the crash, in addition to Plaintiff, included employees of Defendants Mollman Water Conditioning, Inc., d/b/a Cul-ligan Water Conditioning (Mollman), and Asphalt Producers, Inc. (Asphalt), and two non-parties, Michael Meadows and Paul Frolieh.

¶3 Plaintiff brought this action against Mollman and Asphalt in April 1999, claiming their negligence caused the accident. Following nearly two years of discovery and case preparation, the matter was tried to a jury over a five-day period in March 2001. Prior to trial, Defendants requested and were granted three peremptory challenges each as to the proposed jury panel. 1 It is *635 undisputed that Plaintiff did not, at any time prior to this appeal, lodge an objection to the grant of supernumerary challenges to the defense. Defendants exercised all six peremptory challenges and Plaintiff exercised her three.

¶ 4 At trial, Plaintiff called 18 witnesses in her ease-in-chief, none of whom were accident reconstruction experts. Testimony concerning the order and timing of events leading to the crash was conflicting. It included evidence from at least two witnesses, including Plaintiff herself, that Plaintiff accelerated when she saw the Mollman truck start to come from the far right lane of traffic toward the far left lane, where Plaintiff was driving. Plaintiff testified she “speeded up” when she saw the Mollman truck heading for her lane because she thought she could “get out of his way,” 2 and that it was only after she realized the truck was not going to miss her that she applied her brakes and tried to stop.

¶ 5 In its case-in-chief, Mollman called an accident reconstruction expert, Robert W. Painter, Jr., who gave his opinion that a “normal, prudent” driver would have reacted by braking rather than accelerating upon the sight of a truck coming into his or her lane. He also opined that had Plaintiff braked rather than accelerated there would have been no contact between Plaintiffs vehicle and the Mollman truck. Painter had been listed as a witness for Asphalt for several months, but Plaintiff had not attempted to depose him prior to trial.

¶ 6 Defendants called only two other witnesses — a physician and a psychiatrist — and rested. Plaintiff thereafter sought to call her own accident reconstruction expert as a rebuttal witness, and Defendants objected. The trial court sustained Defendants’ objection, noting Plaintiff had not listed the witness, Plaintiff had never attempted to depose Painter, and Defendants had never had an opportunity to depose the proposed witness. The matter was submitted to the jury, which returned a verdict attributing 59 percent contributory negligence to Plaintiff, 38 percent negligence to Mollman, and 1 percent each to Asphalt, Meadows, and Frolieh. The trial court entered judgment on the verdict.

¶7 Plaintiff appeals, asserting, first, that the record as a whole, including Defendants’ cooperation with each other at trial, shows no serious conflict of interest between Defendants, and the trial court therefore committed fundamental, reversible error by allowing each Defendant three peremptory challenges. She also asserts it was reversible error to disallow Plaintiffs use of the previously unidentified accident reconstruction expert on rebuttal. Defendants argue that Plaintiffs failure to object to the trial court’s decision allowing the additional challenges did not preserve that issue for appellate review, and that the trial court properly exercised its discretion in disallowing the rebuttal witness under the circumstances presented.

Peremptory Challenges

¶ 8 As a genera] rule each side in a lawsuit — plaintiff and defense — is entitled to a total of three peremptory challenges. See 12 O.S.2001 §§ 573, 575.1; M & D Motor Freight Lines v. Kelley, 1948 OK 128, 202 P.2d 215 (three peremptory challenges to joint tortfeasor defendants). Under § 575.1, however, if a trial court determines there is a “serious conflict of interest” between one or more defendants, then the court may allow three peremptory challenges to each defendant. The same statute leaves the question of whether and when to grant supernumerary challenges to the trial court’s discretion.

¶ 9 Judicial discretion in this area is not “unregulated,” however, and in Thompson v. Presbyterian Hospital, Inc., 1982 OK 87, *636 ¶ 31, 652 P.2d 260, 268, the Supreme Court reversed a jury verdict because a trial court had abused its discretion by granting supernumerary challenges to the defense when there was no “serious dispute” among the defendants. The Court noted the defendant hospital had requested and received the additional challenges based solely on the hospital’s suggestion that a conflict was likely to evolve among the defendants, but had offered no other support for the existence of conflict among those parties. Id. at ¶ 26, 652 P.2d at 266-67. The Court further held that the plaintiff was not required to prove actual prejudice resulting from the grant of the extra challenges, but that on appellate review, “[pjrejudice to the plaintiff will be deemed to have occurred when any additional peremptory challenge is allowed to a defendant,” and the judgment in question, will be reversed unless the record shows a “serious dispute” in fact exists between one or more co-defendants in the ease. Id. at ¶ 31, 652 P.2d at 267.

¶ 10 The Court in Thompson did not address whether a party must timely object in the lower court to the allocation of peremptory challenges in order to preserve the error for appellate review, nor has it addressed that issue since Thompson was decided. Though the issue has not been widely addressed in other jurisdictions, it appears that courts that have addressed the question have either required or assumed that a timely objection in the lower court is needed to preserve the error for appellate review. See, e.g., Texas Commerce Bank Reagan Through Texas Commerce Bank Nat’l Ass’n v.

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2003 OK CIV APP 20, 65 P.3d 632, 74 O.B.A.J. 999, 2002 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 140, 2002 WL 32058312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-mollman-water-conditioning-inc-oklacivapp-2002.