While investigating a narcotics violation, two City of Riverside police officers scuffled with two suspects and members of the suspects’ family. Four people subsequently pled guilty to various misdemeanor charges. Family members sued the officers and the City of Riverside under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging the use of excessive force during the arrests. A jury found no constitutional violations and acquitted the officers. The district court then dismissed all claims against the City. One of the suspects and his brother appeal, contending that the introduction of guilty pleas and of seized marijuana into evidence was reversible error. They also assert that the dismissal of the City was premature. We affirm.
FACTS
As they approached an illegally parked van, City of Riverside police officers Terry Redfearn and Douglas Riggle (“the officers”) noticed two people in the van concealing bags of what proved to be marijuana. One person, Phillip Palmerin, remained in the van. The other person, Phillip’s cousin Rudy Palmerin, left the van and entered the nearby yard of Rudy’s parents’ house. Rudy refused to comply with the officers’ request to accompany them into the street, and a scuffle developed in the yard. Rudy’s brother, Joseph Palmerin, and their parents, Richard and Cruz Palme-rin, then all joined the scuffle.
Subsequently, Rudy pled guilty to “resisting, delaying or obstructing” a police officer under Cal. Penal Code § 148. Joseph and Richard Palmerin pled guilty to disturbing the peace under Cal. Penal Code § 415(3). Phillip Palmerin pled guilty both to resisting arrest under section 148 and to possession of marijuana under Cal. Health & Safety Code § 11357(b). These crimes are all misdemeanors. Cruz Palmerin was not charged with any offense.
In two separate actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Rudy and Joseph Palmerin and Richard and Cruz Palmerin sought damages from the officers involved in the scuffle, other officers, and the City of Riverside and City council members (“City defendants”), alleging that the officers’ behavior violated the fourth amendment’s prohibition against the use of excessive force in effecting an arrest. After a two-day trial,
In a timely appeal, Rudy and Joseph Palmerin (“the Palmerins”) contend that the district court improperly admitted into evidence the guilty pleas of Rudy, Joseph, Phillip, and Richard Palmerin, and the marijuana found in Phillip Palmerin’s possession by the officers. They further contend that the district court’s dismissal of the City defendants was premature.
We will uphold rulings on the admissibility of evidence unless admitting the evidence was an abuse of the district court’s discretion. Paddock v. Dave Christensen, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
I. The Guilty Pleas
Before trial, counsel for Cruz and Richard Palmerin unsuccessfully sought to exclude admission of the guilty pleas from evidence by a motion in limine.
A. Timeliness of Objections
The City argues that the Palmerins’ failure to object contemporaneously during trial to the admissibility of the pleas into evidence bars them from raising the issue on appeal. See Fed.R.Evid. 103(a)(1). The law in this circuit is unclear regarding whether an unsuccessful pretrial motion in limine will preserve for appeal an objection to the introduction of disputed evidence at trial. See Burgess v. Premier Corp.,
In United States v. Helina,
Three years later, in Sheehy v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co.,
Helina and Sheehy are distinguishable from each other. The disputed matter in Helina related to whether the prosecutor’s behavior in asking questions permited by the in limine motion violated Helina’s constitutional rights by improperly commenting on his invocation of the privilege against self-incrimination. The issue is not precisely the one that was the subject of the motion in limine, and it is one that is highly dependent upon the trial context. We therefore required contemporaneous objection to review for more than plain error. By contrast, the evidence in Sheehy was elicited in direct response to questions sanctioned through the rejection of the in limine motion by the court. The objection was adequately covered by the motion in limine and we held that the point was preserved for appeal. We therefore do not interpret either Helina or Sheehy as requiring us to adopt an all-or-nothing rule.
The uncertainty in this circuit concerning whether a contemporaneous objection is required following an unsuccessful pretrial motion in limine is mirrored by a sharp division of views among the circuits.
Some circuits require that “[objection must be made in the trial court unless a good reason exists not to do so,” notwithstanding an unsuccessful pretrial motion in limine. Rojas v. Richardson,
In contrast, the Third Circuit recently held that no formal objection at trial is necessary where the pretrial motion adequately resolves the admissibility of the disputed evidence “with no suggestion that [the trial court] would reconsider the matter at trial.” American Home Assurance Co. v. Sunshine Supermarket, Inc.,
The rule followed by the Fifth and Eighth Circuits requires a contemporaneous objection to the admissibility of the evidence during trial to preserve the matter for appeal. This rule ensures that the evi-dentiary appeal is based on the actual form and timing of the attempt to introduce the evidence, rather than on an essentially
Pretrial motions are useful tools to resolve issues which would otherwise “clutter up” the trial. Such motions reduce the need for sidebar conferences and argument outside the hearing of the jury, thereby saving jurors’ time and eliminating distractions. See Judge’s Manual for the Management of Complex Criminal Jury Cases § 2.2 (1982) (District judges should “[e]ncourage counsel to bring motions in limine on evidentiary questions. This will prevent disruptions at trial which could render the proceedings incoherent to the jurors.”) Manual for Complex Litigation Second § 32.23 at 271-72 (1985) (“By addressing these [evidentiary issues] before trial [through motions in limine ], judge and the attorneys may be able to give them more deliberate and careful consideration than if the issues were raised for the first time during trial, and pretrial rulings on critical evidentiary questions permit the trial to be conducted more efficiently and effectively.”).
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure state that formal exceptions to court rulings are unnecessary. Fed.R.Civ.P. 46. To require invariably a contemporaneous objection after a rejected in limine motion would be tantamount to requiring formal exceptions. This would exalt the form of timely objection over the substance of whether a proper objection has been made and considered by the trial court.
We, therefore, reject an invariable requirement that an objection that is the subject of an unsuccessful motion in limine be renewed at trial. We adopt the approach of Sheehy and American Home. Accordingly, we hold that where the substance of the objection has been thoroughly explored during the hearing on the motion in limine, and the trial court’s ruling permitting introduction of evidence was explicit and definitive, no further action is required to preserve for appeal the issue of admissibility of that evidence. In applying this approach, we find that the Palmerins have preserved their objection for appeal. The substance of the objection to the admission of the guilty pleas was thoroughly explored during the hearing on the motion in limine, and the trial judge’s ruling was explicit and definitive. There was no hint that the ruling might be subject to reconsideration. Perhaps most important, there was nothing in the manner or context in which the guilty pleas were introduced at trial that was unforeseen or that cast any doubt on the applicability of the trial court’s in limine ruling. Accordingly, we permit the Palmerins to raise on appeal their objections to introduction of the guilty pleas.
B. The Denial of the In Limine Motion
The Palmerins wrongly characterize the guilty pleas as character evidence. The
Since the accusation against the officers •was that they used unconstitutionally excessive force, the jury had to assess what level of force was appropriate in the particular circumstances. In the guilty pleas, the Palmerins admitted that the force they had used against the officers exceeded that permitted by law. These admissions were relevant in enabling the jury to assess the appropriateness of the officers’ response as described in the Palmerins’ direct testimony. Thus, in these circumstances, the district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the pleas since any prejudicial effect was “substantially outweighed” by their probative value. Fed.R.Evid. 403.
II. The Marijuana
In a further pretrial ruling, the district court overruled the Palmerins’ objection to the admission into evidence of the marijuana seized in Phillip Palmerin’s van, and of Phillip’s subsequent plea of guilty to possession of marijuana. The transcribed district court record does not include that part of the trial in which these two items of evidence were introduced. Our rules require that when an appeal is based upon a challenge to the admission of evidence, a copy of the pages of the reporter’s transcript at which the evidence and any objection thereto is recorded must be included. U.S. Ct. of App. 9th Cir.R. 13(a)(1)(B). We cannot review whether a district court has abused its discretion in admitting certain evidence without some documentary indication of whether and under what circumstances the disputed evidence was offered and admitted.
III. The Monell Claims
Relying on Sanchez v. City of Riverside,
A valid claim of municipal liability under Monell v. Department of Social Services,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The two suits were consolidated for trial. Richard .and Cruz Palmerin did not appeal the district court’s rulings or the jury’s verdicts. Phillip Palmerin was never a party to the section 1983 suits.
. This motion was apparently supported by Rudy and Joseph Palmerin, but their counsel did not participate in argument on the motion in limine.
. See abo 21 C. Wright & K. Graham, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 5037 at 195 (1977) ("If a ruling is made at the pretrial stage, it is ‘timely’ and there is no need to renew the objection at trial.”); 1 J. Weinstein and M. Berger, Weinstein's Evidence ¶ 103[02] at 103-17 (1982) ("Ultimately, whether or not the pretrial objection is deemed sufficient to preserve error may well depend upon whether the appellate court feels that justice was done at the trial level.”).
State courts are split on whether a contemporaneous objection during trial is required to preserve a right to appeal on an evidentiary matter admitted over a denied motion in limine. Compare Reeve v. McBrearety,
. It is important to distinguish the situation here, where the in limine motion fails and the evidence is introduced at trial, from the situation where the result of the in limine motion is that the evidence is not used at trial. In Luce v. United States,
. At oral argument, neither party’s counsel could recall with any certainty whether either the marijuana or the convictions were formally admitted as evidence.
. The jury was asked the following question:
"State which of the following finding was the basis of your verdict:
1. No constitutional violations were committed by the defendant. _
(Yes or No)
or
2. Although constitutional violations were committed, the defendant's actions were objectively reasonable and taken in good faith. .-
(Yes or No)”
The jury answered question one affirmatively.
