Defendant Benjamin Barlin appeals from a judgment after verdict in favor of the plaintiff in an- action for damages arising out of a malicious attachment in a prior action and defendant Royal Indemnity Company appeals from a judgment after verdict in favor of plaintiff in an action on an attachment bond issued by it in said prior action. The judgment upon the verdict against defendant Benjamin Barlin was for $5,102.70 compensatory damages and $17,000 punitive damages, however, on motion for a new trial, plaintiff agreed to a remission of.$7,000 of the punitive damages. The judgment against .defendant Royal Indemnity Company was for $8,250, the full’ penal sum of the attachment bond. The actions were consolidated for trial and, by stipulation, consolidated for appeal.
Appellants’ opening brief expressly disavows any, attack on the implied findings of the jury to the effect that the attach *145 ment in the prior action which was the basis of the present litigation was wrongful and instituted without probable cause thereby inferentially conceding that respondent was entitled to a judgment for damages. In seeking a reversal, appellants limit themselves to three grounds: (1) misconduct of respondent’s counsel which deprived appellants of a fair trial; (2) error in jury instructions relating to the issue of the allowance of attorney’s fees as damages; and (3) insufficiency of the evidence to support an allowance of attorney’s fees as an item of damages.
During the direct examination of respondent, she volunteered a remark that she had received notice of Mr. Barlin’s conviction for shooting at a former wife. Her testimony was stricken on appellants’ motion and shortly thereafter respondent’s counsel asked her if she had conversed with any person “with reference to Mr. Barlin’s conduct toward one of his former wives.” She replied in the affirmative and was then asked to relate what she had been told. No objection was made to the question and in answer thereto she repeated in substance her previous voluntary statement. Upon objection by appellants’ counsel the court promptly admonished the jury to disregard the statement made by her as to Mr. Barlin’s conduct or conviction as “completely as though you never had heard o.f it. ’ ’ Appellants assign the foregoing interrogation of the witness by respondent’s counsel as prejudicial misconduct. It does not appear that at any other time during the trial of the action which lasted approximately eight days, there was any further attempt by respondent’s counsel to elicit the same testimony, nor does it appear that he made any attempt to allude to the statement in his argument to the jury. As a general rule, error arising from misconduct in the interrogation of witnesses before a jury is deemed to be cured by a prompt instruction to the jury to disregard such matters.
(White
v.
Red Mountain Fruit Co.,
The second charge of prejudicial misconduct which appellants contend constitutes reversible error relates to the argument of respondent’s counsel to the jury. It cannot be gainsaid that the derogatory remarks of respondent’s counsel attacking the character of Mr. Barlin and the remarks concerning the trial tactics and veracity of appellants’ counsel were intemperate, indecorous and undignified. The observation in
Gist
v.
French,
However, not once did appellants object to any of the challenged remarks of respondent’s counsel nor did they make any assignments of misconduct based thereon and it is therefore too late to raise the point on appeal. In
State Rubbish etc. Assn.
v.
Siliznoff,
Appellants’ third and final charge of misconduct is directed to certain asserted appeals to sympathy in respondent’s argument to the jury. Appellants cite as examples such remarks as “the woman was a widow”; “she had a child”; “a little bit of woman, a timid woman”; “a woman about to cave in on the stand”; and, “this little woman.” Appellants made no objection during the trial to any of the foregoing statements and for the reasons above stated are precluded from raising them on appeal. See
Davis
v.
Franson,
Appellants’ next contention of prejudicial error is
*149
directed to the giving of two instructions to the jury on the issue of the recoverability of attorney’s fees expended or incurred by the respondent in the prior attachment suit as an element'of damages in the present action for malicious attachment. Appellants concede that, under the rule laid down in
Reachi
v.
National Auto. & Cas. Ins. Co.,
The previous litigation between the parties which led to the present action against Mr. Barlin consisted of a divorce action consolidated for trial with a civil action filed by Mr. Barlin against Mrs. Barlin based on two counts, each to recover a balance due on two separate alleged loans. The writ of attachment, the wrongful levy of which is involved in the present action against appellants, was procured and levied as to the second count only of the previous civil action. In addition thereto in the previous action the respondent herein filed certain counterclaims. Appellants offered an instruction in the instant matter to the effect that in arriving at a verdict, if it was found that respondent was entitled to damages for attorney’s fees, only the services rendered with regard to the discharge of the attachment in the prior action should be considered and not services rendered with regard to the divorce suit or the count upon which no attachment was levied or the respondent’s counterclaims in the previous action. The court modified the proffered instruction by striking out the reference to the nonattachment count and the counterclaims. Appellants now contend that by reason of such modification, the jury “could well infer” that all legal services performed in the prior civil action could be considered in determining an award of attorney’s fees as an item of damages. Appellants do not contend that the instruction as given in and of itself was erroneous but that appellants were entitled to have the jury instructed as to the matters which the court struck out from the proffered instruction. However, the matter of the exclusion of consideration of services other than rendered in discharging the attachment as a recoverable item of damages is amply covered by the same instruction to which the objection is made which specifically limits the jury consideration of attorney’s fees “to the discharge of the attachment alone.” Another instruction offered by the appellants and given by the court, specifically referred to the reasonable value of legal services “necessarily rendered, relating to, incident to, con *151 nected with, a part of and reasonably necessary in connection with the proceedings designed to obtain the dissolution of the attachment and only rendered for that purpose.” (Emphasis added.) Still another instruction offered by the appellants and given by the court reads as follows: “If you find from the evidence that certain of the professional services allegedly rendered by counsel for plaintiff and claimed by plaintiff as services relating to the dissolution of the attachment were actually rendered either wholly or in part for the purpose of attempting to secure an advantage to defendant, Mrs. Barlin, in said action other than the dissolution of the attachment, you may not allow for that portion of said services but can only allow for services rendered in respect to the dissolution of the attachment.” We find no error in the challenged instruction as given and the other instructions given clearly limited the jury to a consideration of the attorney’s services rendered in the discharge of the attachment.
Judgments affirmed.
Pox, Acting P. J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
