Opinion
Plаintiff appeals from an adverse judgment in this action for personal injury. We conclude that this is a patently frivolous appeal and, in addition to affirming the judgment, shall impose sanctions on plaintiff’s counsel.
Injured in a three-car collision, plaintiff brought suit against defendant and others. The jury by special verdict found defendant was not negligent and thus not responsible for plaintiff’s injuries.
Plaintiff’s sole contention on appeal is that defensе counsel committed prejudicial misconduct during closing argument. 1 She asserts defense counsel’s argument was designed to show defendant was unable to pay a substantial judgment, thus appealing to the passion and sympathy of the jury and denying her a fair trial.
The passage set out in the margin is the only part of defense counsel’s closing argument that is contained in the record, plaintiff having elected to prosecute this appeal without benefit of a reporter’s transcript. Obviously, *732 this court is in no position to determine whether counsel’s statements were taken out of context, or even if improper, were prejudicial. 2
Plaintiff nevertheless сlaims that the excerpted portion of defense counsel’s closing argument “improperly introduced an element of sympathy by reference to his client’s inability to pay a substantial judgment.” We read it differently. In our viеw, the argument merely declaims that if money grew on trees, plaintiff could harvest it; but since it doesn’t, the jury should only return a fair and reasonable award. As Witkin notes, “[t]he term ‘misconduct’ is generally used in connection with trials to mean the disregard of rules of evidence or procedure for the purpose and with the effect of prejudicing the adverse party’s claim or defense before a jury.” (4 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Trial, § 162, p. 2982.) No such disregard can be divined in this innocuous argument. In short, it is simply not misconduct to challenge the reasonableness of plaintiff’s damage request.
And even if we were to find misconduct in this argument (which we obviously do not), mere misconduct doеs not warrant reversal. As the Supreme Court noted nearly eighty years ago, “[i]t rarely occurs in any case which is of moment and sharply contested that counsel on both sides in their zeal and partisan devotion to their clients do not indulge in arguments, remarks, insinuations, or suggestions which find neither support in, nor are referable or applicable to the testimony, or warranted by any fair theory upon which the case is being presented. If such impropriety of counsel always afforded ground for a new trial, there would be little prospect of any litigation becoming finally determined. It is only when the conduct of counsel consists of a willful or persistent effоrt to place before a jury clearly incompetent evidence, or the statements or remarks of counsel are of such a character as to manifest a design on his part to awake the resentment of the jury, to excite their prejudices or passions against the opposite party, or to enlist their sympathies in favor of his client or against the cause of his adversary, and the instructions of the court to thе jury to disregard such offered evidence or objectionable remarks of counsel could not serve to remove the effect or cure the evil, that prejudicial error is committed. It is only in extreme cases that the court, when acting promptly and speaking clearly and directly on the subject, cannot, by instructing the jury to disregard such matters, correct the impropriety of the act of counsel and remove any effect his conduct or remarks would otherwise have.”
(Tingley
v.
Times Mirror
(1907)
Moreover, plaintiff’s failure to object to the alleged misconduct in the court below constitutes a waiver of her right to have the matter addressed on appeal.
(Whitfield
v.
Roth
(1974)
In assessing that prejudice, the
Sabella
court noted that each case must ultimately rest upon a court’s view of the overall record, “taking into account such factors, inter alia, as the nature and seriousness of the remarks and misconduct, the general atmosphere, including the judge’s control, of the trial, the likelihood of prejudicing the jury, and the efficacy of objection or admonition under all thе circumstances.” (
Plaintiff argues her failure to raise a timely objection was tactical. This contention offers plaintiff no solace. As we have notеd, in the absence of a timely objection the error is waived unless it is so aggravated that it cannot be cured by admonition. (See also 4 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Trial, § 163, p. 2983.) In the absence of a showing of that kind of prejudiсial misconduct, an appellate court is not concerned with the mental pro
*734
cesses employed by counsel in selecting his trial tactics.
(Buchanan
v.
Nye
(1954)
Plaintiff’s reliance on
Seimon
v.
Southern Pac. Transportation Co.
(1977)
Here, however, the trial court
denied
plaintiff’s new trial motion. “In an appeal . . . from a judgment after denial of a motion for new trial, the failure of. . . counsel to object or except may bе treated as a waiver of the error.” (5 Witkin,
supra,
§ 119, p. 307;
Malkasian
v.
Irwin, supra,
In sum, we are urged to reverse the judgment for a trivial and waived claim of error on a patently inadequate record. And if that were not egregious enough, in the trial court plaintiff expressly conceded the very issue she now tenders on appeal. Addressing the claimed misconduct on the motion for new trial, plaintiff’s counsel told the court and opposing counsel that no response was necessary because “I don’t think that’s enough for a new trial and I’ll be candid about that.”
We will also be candid. This is а frivolous appeal. An appeal is frivolous “when it is prosecuted for an improper motive—to harass the respondent or delay the effect of an adverse judgment—or when it indisputably has no merit—when any rеasonably attorney would agree that
*735
the appeal is totally and completely without merit.”
(In re Marriage of Flaherty
(1982)
Thе judgment is affirmed. A penalty of $1,000 is imposed upon the law firm of Tocher, Gazzigli & Boeckman. This penalty will be recovered as costs by defendant.
Regan, Acting P. J., and Sims, J., concurred.
Notes
The alleged misconduct consists solely of the following statement by defense counsel: “Mr. Tocher [counsel for plaintiff] says $400,000 may seem like a lot of money. That may be the biggest understatement of the trial. It is an incredible sum of money. And the problem a lawyer in my position faces is no matter what hе says, he’s going to come off sounding a little bit callous. I suppose because I don’t believe that $400,000 is a reasonable figure. If I weren’t representing my client, if there were indefinite quantities of money, then maybe. But you’ve gоt to be fair to both sides in this case. And what we’re after is a reasonable compensation for her injuries. And $400,000 is—I think it’s ridiculous.’’
We note that plaintiff’s statement of facts refers simply to her preargument statement, notwithstanding the оbvious fact that in the absence of a reporter’s transcript this court has no way of knowing whether or not the stated facts were proven at trial. We must likewise ignore plaintiff’s unsupported assertion that the evidence presented at trial overwhelmingly demonstrated defendant’s negligence.
Plaintiff’s counsel argued that the appeal was brought in good faith and not for an improper motive. Opposing counsel maintainеd that the appeal was filed by plaintiff solely as leverage to induce a waiver of costs. The clerk’s record reflects that costs in the sum of $1,724.35 were allowed by the court to defendant as the prevailing party. Since we find this appeal to be indisputably without merit, we need not decide whether it was also brought for an improper purpose.
