Affirmed by published opinion. Chief Judge WILKINSON wrote the opinion, in which Judge RUSSELL and Chief Judge BOYLE joined.
OPINION
Appellant Robert D. Morning advances two grounds for overturning the jury verdict for appellee Zapata Protein (USA), Inc. on his Jones Act claim. 'First, he alleges that Zapata’s peremptory strikes of two potential jurors were impermissibly race-based under
Batson v. Kentucky,
I.
Morning worked as a marine engineer aboard the Chesapeake- Bay, a fishing vessel owned and operated by Zapata. On June 5, 1992, Morning was pulling large drum fish and sharks out -of the net. One large shark came off the gaffing hook he was using, and Morning stepped backwards to regain his balance. The fish that had been collected on the deck made its surface slippery. Morning slipped and fell over the fish pump hose that lay on the deck behind him.
Morning filed suit under the Jones Act, 46 App. U.S.C. § 688, alleging personal injuries. At trial on June 5 and 6, 1996, Morning maintained that unseaworthy conditions on the Chesapeake Bay had caused his injuries. Morning acknowledged that slippery conditions are unavoidable when a fishing vessel is engaged in unloading her nets. However, he asserted that the fish pump hose on the Ctiesapeake Bay was unusually close to the ship’s rail, making his work conditions unsafe. At trial Zapata introduced photographs of its other ships to demonstrate that the position of the hose on the Chesapeake Bay did not substantially differ from that on the company’s other vessels. Zapata also produced pictures of the Chesapeake Bay herself, taken the morning of the accident, that refuted Morning’s contention that the hose was unusually or dangerously close to the rail.
The jury in this case was selected from a panel of twenty-four veniremen that included *215 seven African-Americans. Seven people were called from the venire to the jury box. Morning exercised two peremptory challenges, striking two white jurors. Zapata exercised one peremptory challenge to strike the only black juror in the group of seven. Three more persons were then called from the venire, including one black woman. Zapata exercised a second peremptory strike to remove her. A final individual was called from the venire, a white woman, whom neither party challenged. The jury was sworn and the remaining veniremen were excused and left the courtroom.
After the venire was dismissed Morning raised a Batson objection to Zapata’s peremptory strikes. The district court considered this claim at a sidebar conference. Counsel for Zapata proffered the potential jurors’ intelligence and educational backgrounds as the basis for its strikes. Morning objected that one white juror had an educational background similar to the two stricken jurors and a second white juror had a “weaker” educational background. Zapata responded that the two black jurors who were stricken had twelfth and eleventh grade educations, while every serving juror except one had undertaken some post-high school education. The one exception was a juror who had obtained her graduate equivalency diploma and worked as a store supervisor. According to Zapata, this juror thus achieved a higher level of employment responsibility than either of the stricken black jurors (one was unemployed, the other a school bus shop aide).
The court then took Morning’s Batson motion under advisement. After the jury returned a verdict for Zapata, the district court denied the Batson motion as untimely because it was raised after the venire had been dismissed. The court also rejected Morning’s request to overturn the jury’s verdict as contrary to the evidence. Morning how appeals.
H
Morning alleges that Zapata’s counsel employed peremptory strikes to exclude black veniremen from the jury in violation of the Equal Protection Clause,
see Batson,
The rule that objections not timely raised are waived is well-established,
see United States v. Socony-Vacuun Oil Co., Inc.,
This general rule of timeliness is especially pertinent to
Batson
challenges. It allows.the trial court to rule on what the court has only recently observed, namely the exercise of a peremptory jury strike.
See United States v. Grandison,
Batson
itself left implementation of its holding to each court in the context of its own jury selection procedure.
In
United States v. Joe,
though we did not confront the issue of timeliness directly, we urged that
Batson
objections be raised and ruled on as early as possible.
III.
Morning also asks us to hold that the jury’s verdict for Zapata was unsupported by the evidence. However, the evidence outlined above supports a verdict for Zapata. There was ample evidence that the fish pump' hose was not improperly situated, and the decks of fishing vessels are slippery by nature. Indeed, if slime on the deck of a fishing vessel renders it unseaworthy, there must be very few seaworthy fishing vessels afloat. Like the district court, we cannot say “that the verdict is against the clear weight of the evidence or is based upon evidence which is false or will result in a miscarriage of justice.”
Gill v. Rollins Protective Services Co.,
AFFIRMED.
