651 N.E.2d 450 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1994
Lead Opinion
Appellant Michael Remley filed a lawsuit against appellee Cincinnati Metropolitan Housing Authority for personal injuries he allegedly received when, while fitting a replacement window into a window opening on property owned by appellee, he stepped off a ladder into a hole in the floor. In his complaint appellant asserted that appellee was negligent in failing to maintain the premises where he was injured in a reasonably safe manner.
The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict of $25,143.15 in favor of appellant, granting him $11,640.15 for medical costs, $7,500 for lost wages, and $6,000 for his pain and suffering. The jury also found that appellant was forty percent negligent. The trial court, pursuant to R.C.
Appellant asserts in his sole assignment of error that the trial court erred by reducing his monetary damages by applying R.C.
A review of the record before us reveals that appellant waived any claim regarding the unconstitutionality of R.C.
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
GORMAN, J., concurs in judgment only.
BETTMAN, J., concurs separately.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with the opinion that the trial court's judgment should be affirmed, but I would not affirm on the grounds of waiver. I read Menefee v. Queen City Metro (1990),
Admittedly, the holding in Sorrell regarding violation of the right to trial by jury in Section 5, Article I and open courts in Section
Concurrence Opinion
There are aspects to the question of whether and when an intermediate appellate court should consider a constitutional issue which is raised on appeal but which was not raised at the trial level that I believe are unclear. I write separately in the hope that the Supreme Court will provide additional guidance on this important issue.
I think we all agree that the best practice is to raise a constitutional issue at the trial level first. However, the rule that an appellate court will not consider any error which counsel could have raised at the trial level, but failed to do so, has been softened to allow some discretion about reviewability in criminal cases involving constitutional questions. See, e.g., In re M.D. (1988),
What is also unclear is whether an appellate court in a civil case has this discretionary right to review a constitutional challenge not raised below. The proposition that a claim of unconstitutionality of legislation is never waived, suggested by the court of appeals in Lakewood v. All Structures, Inc. (1983),
As more challenges are being made under the state Constitution to legislation in civil cases, guidance on whether the appellate courts have discretion to review issues not raised at the trial court level but briefed at the appellate level would be of great assistance. Pending such assistance, I agree with the lead opinion that the constitutional issue raised for the first time on appeal in this case should not be reviewed by this court. At trial, the only objection made by appellant's counsel to the setoff provisions was that they should not be made by the court but by the jury. There was no challenge on any basis to the right of the appellee to have the benefits set off. The appellant did not even call to the attention of the trial court the fact that at the time of his post-verdict hearing a constitutional challenge to collateral benefits under tort reform, to which he would have this court analogize, had been accepted for review in the Ohio Supreme Court.1