MEMORANDUM OPINION
¶ 1 Plaintiffs case results from a landlord-tenant dispute in which the landlord originally brought action to foreclose upon a security interest in personal property and to recover damages relating to a breach of the lease agreement. Tenant 1 asserted a counterclaim for conversion, relating to the property left on the rental premises and later leased in part to a subsequent tenant. The matter was presented to a jury which returned a verdict in favor of the landlord, Sullivan, finding no conversion occurred and awarding $7000.00 in damages.
¶2 Tenant appealed the jury verdict. The Court of Civil Appeals, in an unpublished opinion, affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded the cause for further proceedings. The Court of Civil Appeals found fundamental error occurred because a jury instruction relating to the commercial reasonableness of the landlord’s disposition of the personal property was not submitted to the jury. Certiorari has been previously granted in this case. We vacate the Court of Civil Appeals opinion and affirm the trial court.
¶ 3 From the record provided to this Court, it appears no instruction was proposed at the trial level nor any exception made to the exclusion of an instruction regarding commercial reasonableness. Furthermore, Tenant directed no proposition of error at such an instruction on appeal.
¶ 4 Tenant’s failure to preserve this error at any level poses two questions for this Court: First, can an appellate court reverse a judgment based upon a jury verdict for fundamental error in a jury instruction, if the issue regarding whether fundamental error occurred was not raised by either party on appeal; Second, if fundamental errors are reviewable without being raised in the appellate briefs, did such an error occur with the omission of an instruction pertaining to the commercial reasonable-
ness of the landlord’s disposition of personal property in which he held a security interest. This Court finds fundamental errors reviewable even in the absence of addressing such error on appeal. However, we find no fundamental error in the instant case with regard to the omission of an instruction directed at the commercial reasonableness of the landlord’s action.
¶ 5 With regard to error in jury instructions, we look to 12 O.S.1991 § 578:
A party excepting to the giving of instructions, or the refusal thereof, shall not be required to file a formal bill of exceptions; but it shall be sufficient to make objection thereto by dictating into the record in open court, out of the hearing of the jury, after the reading of all instructions, the number of the particular instruction that was requested, refused and is excepted to, or the number of the particular instruction given by the court that is excepted to. Provided, further, that the court shall furnish copies of the instructions to the plaintiff and defendant prior to the time and instructions are given by the court.
If objection to the refusing or the giving of an instruction is not made in accord with the procedure outlined in § 578, the authority of the appellate court to review the alleged error is severely limited.
Mason v. McNeal,
[Wjithout exception saved to the instruction as required by [§ 578], we are not at liberty to review the alleged error, except for fundamental errors of law. In determining the latter question we may not search beyond the instructions themselves. To proceed beyond that point in our review would result in disregarding the plain terms of the statute!.]
Mason,
¶ 6 Even so, it is within the purview of this Court to review the record for fundamental error.
See Graham v. Keuchel,
¶ 7 Fundamental error compromises the integrity of the proceeding to such a degree that the error has a substantial effect on the rights of one or more of the parties.
See
12 O.S.1991 § 2104 (Subcommittee’s notes: “Certainly, the Oklahoma courts are committed in civil cases to protecting litigants from the commission of fundamental error in the trial cases.”
See Estate of Campbell v. Lepley,
¶8 It is the critical and decisive nature of fundamental or plain error which may necessitate its correction even in the absence of proper preservation of the error; this is the foundation of the reasoning behind
¶ 9 When the error is a matter of the instruction given the jury and the record has not been properly preserved, “the review will be confined to prejudicial error, erroneous statement of fundamental law, appearing upon the face of the instructions.”
Mason,
¶ 10 We would note Forty-second West has provided only a marginal record for the evaluation this cause, having designated neither a transcript nor a narrative summary of the jury trial proceedings held in this matter. As a result, the issues framed for the jury during the course of the trial and upon which the instructions were presumably based, are not entirely preserved for review by this Court.
¶ 11 We have po clear indication from the record the importance or lack of importance “commercial reasonableness” played in the trial on this matter. It does not appear to be an issue developed in any detail in the pleadings, answers, interrogatories, or motions nor do any of the other materials indicate it was of primary concern in the development of Tenant’s case.
¶ 12 This Court stated in
Sellars v. McCullough,
¶ 13 Examined on their face, the twenty instructions given the jury for evaluation of this action demonstrate no erroneous statement of fundamental law. Without an erroneous and prejudicial statement of fundamental law, this Court’s review of the instructions goes no further.
¶ 14 Finding no fundamental error upon examination of the record in the instant case, the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals is vacated and the judgment of the trial court affirmed.
¶ 16 CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED. COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OPINION VACATED. JUDGMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Defendants/Appellants are referred to collectively as Tenant or Forty-second West Corp.
