Robert MURPHY and Technology Innovations International, Inc., Appellants,
v.
INTERNATIONAL ROBOTICS SYSTEMS, INC. and Howard Hornsby, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
R. Stuart Huff and Mark L. Mallios of the Law Offices of R. Stuart Huff, Coral Gables, for appellants.
David A. Jaynes, West Palm Beach, for appellees.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied March 18, 1998.
KLEIN, Judge.
It seems as though, in every week in which we sit, we get at least one appeal in which we are asked to reverse because оf improper, but unobjected-to, closing argument of counsel. We had two such cases during the week this case was argued. We affirmed the other one without discussing the issue.
In the thirty-three years since this court was created, it has never granted a new trial in a civil case grounded solely on improper argument where thеre was no objection during trial. Nevertheless, we keep getting appeals in which attorneys cite decisions from the first, third and fifth districts involving this issue, and urge us to follow them. Most of these cases are affirmed without opinion. We are affirming this case as well, but writing to explain why we do not agree with the decisions of our sister courts.[1]*588 We do so in the hopes that a litigant considering an appeal to this court, whose best hope for reversal is unobjected-to argument of counsel, will carefully consider whether it is worth the cost.
The arguments being raised on this appeal include opposing counsel accusing the individual plaintiff of wanting tо "cash in a lottery ticket in this litigation," and suggesting that if the jurors awarded appellant damages based on a "phony consultancy agreement" they would be "accessories, after the fact, to tax fraud." When we asked appellants' counsel, at oral argument, why he did not make an objection if he thought that these arguments were so egregious, he responded that it is his practice not to object because the jury might hold it against his client.
Before we explain why we do not follow the decisions of the other district courts of appeal, we must address Norman v. Gloria Farms, Inc.,
Prior to Norman, this court had adhered to the position which it took in Nelson v. Reliance Insurance Co.,
There are two things which make Norman unique. First, the panel in Norman was unwilling to reverse solely because of closing argument, and was very careful to point out that it was only the combination of juror misconduct and the closing argument which "substantially undermined plaintiffs' right to a fair trial, compromised the intеgrity of this jury trial, and thwarted substantial justice."
The other thing which makes Norman unusual is the argument itself. Plaintiff was injured while hog hunting as an invited guest *589 on defendant's ranch. He was suing the defendant for negligence, and defense counsel argued to the jurors that if they returned a verdict for the plaintiff it would end hog hunting in Okeechobee County. As the Norman panel observed, counsel was telling the jurors "that they would in fact be personally affected by the outcome of this case," and that they should "consider the effect of a plaintiffs' verdict on their lives in Okeechobee." Id. at 1021.
This type of argument has been held to constitute fundamental error in criminal cases. See, e.g., Grant v. State,
It is not that we condone improper or unethical argument. See, e.g., Bellsouth Human Resources Admin., Inc. v. Colatarci,
The requirement of a contemporaneous objection is based on practical necessity and basic fairness in the operation of a judicial systеm. It places the trial judge on notice that error may have been committed, and provides him an opportunity to correct it at an early stage of the proceedings. Delay and an unnecessary use of the appellate process result from a failure to cure early that which must be cured eventually.
The contemporaneous objection rule is well established in Florida in regard to argument of counsel. There must be an objection at the time the remarks are made. Tyus v. Apalachicola Northern R.R. Co.,
Prior to 1985, the reluctance of counsel to move for mistrial, because of the delay and expеnse which result from the granting of the motion, was understandable. In 1985, however, the Florida Supreme Court, in Ed Ricke eliminated this problem. The court held that the trial court can withhold ruling on a timely motion for mistrial until after the jury has a returned a verdict. The trial court does not, accordingly, have to rule right when the motion is made, as it did before Ed Ricke. Now those who are on the receiving end of improper argument can have their cake and eat it, too.
Although the Florida Supreme Court has reversed for a new trial based on unobjected-to closing argument, the last time it did so in a civil case was in 1956. Seaboard Air Line R.R. v. Strickland,
Plaintiff's counsel in Tyus argued that railroad cases all follow a similar pattern, in which the railroad is investigating to exonerate itself before the plaintiff is even buried. He argued that the railroad had hired not only two of the most brilliant Tallahassee lawyers, but аn ex-senator as well, its philosophy being a million dollars for defense, but not a penny for compromise. Noting that there was only a rusty sign at the crossing at the time of the accident, he told the jury that the railroad had since installed blinkers, a fact which was not in evidence. If the corporation had spent the money on the blinkers *590 before the accident, he argued, another human being's life would not have been snuffed out in pursuit of the almighty dollar. Counsel concluded by asking the jury to "give consideration to the rights and privileges of the citizens of Liberty County with reference to ... a negligent murder."
Tyus was the last time the Florida Supreme Court wrote on unobjected-to argument in a civil case. The contemporaneous objection rule outweighed, in the court's view, the possible injustice resulting from the closing argument. As the court emphasized, the trial judge "who was in the milieu of the court room throughout the trial," was in "a much better position" than an appellatе court, to determine if the argument was so prejudicial as to require a new trial.
There is an exception to the contemporaneous objection rule, for errors which are deemed fundamental and which can thus be raised for the first time on appeal. Years after the Florida Supreme Court last reversed a civil case for a new trial based on unobjected-to closing argument (Strickland in 1956), the court defined fundamental error as "error which goes to the foundation of the case, or goes to the merits of the cause of action," which appellate courts should apply "very guardedly." Sanford v. Rubin,
In criminal cases the Florida Supreme Court requires, in order for аn error to be deemed fundamental, that it be "equivalent to a denial of due process." Mordenti v. State,
Considering the nature of the remarks which the supreme court hеld not to be fundamental error in Tyus, and the court's later definition of fundamental error in Sanford v. Rubin and in criminal cases, we do not think we are being inconsistent with our supreme court when we all but close the door on allowing this issue to be raised for the first time on appeal.
No discussion of unobjected-to closing argument would be complete without a discussion of Hagan v. Sun Bank of Mid-Florida, N.A.,
First, the trial court must determine whether the error was so pervasive, inflammatory, and prejudicial as to preclude the jury's rational consideration of the case.... Second, the trial court must decide whether the error was fundamental. In essence, this is a legal decision that the еrror was so extreme that it could not be corrected by an instruction if an objection had been lodged, and that it so damaged the fairness of the trial that the public's interest in our system of justice justifies a new trial even when no lawyer took the steps necessary to give a party the right to demand a new trial.
Hagan,
Although the sеcond district did not go so far as to hold in Hagan that there is no closing argument in a civil case which could ever be fundamental error, the court acknowledged that it is "extremely close to a Catch-22 because the trial attorney who did not object must establish that the closing argument was exceptionally objectiоnable." Id. at 586. Considering the fact that the second district has never found such an error *591 in its forty years of existence, that may be an understatement.
Most of the Florida cases in which courts have granted new trials, even though the argument was not objected to, have required, as the Hagan court noted, that the argument be "pervasive." Hagan,
After reviewing dozens of these cases ... I have come to be of the view that a party who does not object to cоunsel's comments in closing should not be allowed to complain of those comments on appeal. It is anomalous that the more objectionable the comments, the less the incentive to object.
So far as our research indicates, no other courts in this country allow improper argument to be raised for the first time on appeal in civil cases. According to a recent article in the American Bar Association Journal,[3] improper argument is a nationwide problem; however, few courts have even addressed the issue of whether it could be raised for the first time on appeal.[4]
Our unwillingness to grant new trials, where the error has not been preserved, does not mean that we find it less distasteful than other courts. We have reported to the Florida Bar attorneys who made unethical[5] argument. The Florida Supreme Court has publicly reprimanded or suspended lawyers for unethical argument. See, e.g., The Florida Bar v. Kelner,670 So.2d 62 (Fla.1996); The Florida Bar v. Schaub,618 So.2d 202 (Fla. 1993). We also know from experience that even when courts do not report counsel to the Bar, the Bar investigates unethical conduct on its own when it reads about it in an opinion. We have concluded that it is more appropriate to deal with unethical argument in this manner than to reverse an otherwise error-free case for a new trial, when a timely objection might have obviated the need for imposing that burden on our judicial system.
We have considered the other issues raised by appellant and find them to be without merit. Affirmed.
FARMER and STEVENSON, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The third district was the first to grant a new trial based on unobjected-to argument in Borden, Inc. v. Young,
First district cases include Pippin v. Latosynski,
Fifth district cases include Schubert v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
[2] Akin v. State,
[3] Mark Hansen, A.B.A. Journal, June 1997 at 18.
[4] In Rojas v. Richardson,
[5] The two ethical rules which improper argument is most likely to violate are Rule Regulating Florida Bar 4-3.4(e), which prohibits lawyers from arguing facts which are not in evidence and expressing personal opinions, and Rulе 4-3.5(a), which provides that a "lawyer shall not seek to influence a judge, juror, prospective juror, or other decision maker except as permitted by law or the rules of court." Some trial courts are warning counsel at the beginning of trial not to engage in improper argument. When counsel violate those orders, they are also in violation of another ethical rule, 4-3.4(c), which provides that lawyers may not disobey rules of the tribunal. See, e.g., Airport Rent-A-Car, Inc. v. Lewis,
