Linda J. Carlston appeals from the circuit court’s denial of her motion for new trial after a jury verdict in favor of Salt Lake County (“County”) on its negligence claim. We affirm.
In December 1986, the County sued Carl-ston for negligently causing $551 in collision damages to one of its vehicles. The case went to trial on July 30, 1987. After voir dire of a jury venire comprising five women and seven men, one woman was excused for cause. The County then used all of its peremptory challenges to strike three of the four women remaining on the venire. The empanelled jury consisted of one woman and three men. Carlston made no objection to the composition of the jury or to the manner in which the County had exercised its peremptory challenges, and the trial proceeded to completion that day.
Two weeks after the jury returned a special verdict finding Carlston negligent, she filed a motion for new trial pursuant to Utah R.Civ.P. 59(a)(1). She claimed she was denied a fair trial because the County’s peremptory challenges of the three women made it impossible for the petit jury to reflect a fair cross section of the community. In her three-page supporting memorandum, Carlston referred the trial court only to the following trio of cases, summarizing their holdings and asserting, with meager analysis, that their reasoning applied to her case. 1
In
Batson v. Kentucky,
Two years before
Batson,
however, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals had held that the sixth amendment prohibits a prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges to strike potential jurors of a particular race.
McCray v. Abrams,
*655 On appeal, Carlston again refers to these authorities, although she acknowledges that the sixth amendment does not apply in civil proceedings. She asserts, for the first time, that Sections 7,10, and 11 of Article I of the Utah Constitution and Utah Code Ann. §§ 78-21-1, 78-21-2 (1987) prohibit a party in a civil action from exercising its peremptory challenges in a manner that unreasonably restricts the possibility that the jury ultimately selected will represent a fair cross section of the community. Appellant cites no cases interpreting or applying the Utah constitutional provisions and statutes on which she relies.
Without expressing any view on the extent to which the equal protection clause of the federal constitution, the due process clause of the state constitution, or the state constitutional and statutory jury trial provisions proscribe a civil litigant’s exercise of peremptory challenges of jury venire members solely because they are women, 4 we decline to address these issues because appellant failed to present them to the trial court in a timely manner.
Carlston made no challenge to the jury selection process in this case until after the return of an adverse verdict. It is axiomatic that, before a party may advance an issue on appeal, the record must clearly show that it was
timely
presented to the trial court in a manner sufficient to obtain a ruling thereon.
Buehner Block Co. v. UWCAssocs.,
We see no reason to exempt
Batson-type
constitutional claims from application of this waiver rule.
5
In describing the eviden-
*656
tiary burden on a criminal defendant alleging discrimination in the exercise of per-emptories, the
Batson
court itself referred to a defendant’s “timely objection to a prosecutor’s challenges.”
Batson,
The “timely objection” rule is designed to prevent defendants from “sandbagging” the prosecution by waiting until trial has concluded unsatisfactorily before insisting on an explanation for jury strikes that by then the prosecutor may largely have forgotten. Furthermore, prosecu-torial misconduct is easily remedied prior to commencement of trial simply by seating the wrongfully struck venireperson. After trial, the only remedy is setting aside the conviction.
United States v. Forbes,
In addition, the process mandated by
Batson,
which first requires a prima facie showing by defendant and then a showing by the prosecution to rebut the inference of racially based challenges, rests on the premise that the trial court will hear the objection and make a factual finding of whether the prosecutor has used peremptory challenges in a discriminatory manner.
See Irving v. State,
Because Carlston proceeded to trial without presenting her Batson-type claim to the trial judge for determination and rectification of the alleged denial of her constitutional rights, we conclude that she waived any such objection. Accordingly, the trial judge did not abuse her discretion in denying Carlston’s motion for new trial. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
BILLINGS and ORME, JJ., concur.
Notes
. Although it is possible appellant made a less superficial analysis and presentation of the issues at oral argument on the motion for new trial, she did not include a transcript of that hearing in the record on appeal.
. The Utah Supreme Court recently considered such a claim in
State v. Cantu,
.The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reached the same conclusion in
Booker v. Jabe,
In
Taylor v. Louisiana,
in holding that petit juries must be drawn from a source fairly representative of the community we impose no requirement that petit juries actually chosen must mirror the community and reflect the various distinctive groups in the population. Defendants are not entitled to a jury of any particular composition.
Id.
at 538,
.
Batson's
equal protection analysis has been applied in civil cases where the litigant claimed racial discrimination in the exercise of peremptory challenges by the opposition, a nongovernmental party.
Fludd
v.
Dykes,
Some recent criminal cases, however, have refused to extend
Batson
to alleged discrimination on the basis of gender by a prosecutor exercising peremptory challenges.
E.g., United States v. Hamilton,
.
See State v. Bankhead,
