706 So. 2d 346 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1998
Appellants, Warren Wallace and Charlotte Wallace, plaintiffs below, appeal an adverse final judgment entered pursuant to a jury verdict in their personal injury action. They assert that the trial court erroneously failed to excuse certain jurors for cause and improperly restricted the scope of their voir dire questioning to the prospective jurors about their theory of the case. We note from the record, however, that while the appellants made contemporaneous objections to the court’s failure to excuse the subject jurors for cause during the voir dire proceeding, they never renewed such objections immediately before the jury was sworn in this case. We further note that the appellants never lodged any objection to the court’s restriction of their voir dire questioning. The question for our determination, therefore, is whether the appellants have adequately preserved these issues for appellate review. We conclude that they have not and affirm.
Were we to hold otherwise, Joiner could proceed to trial before a jury he unquali-fiedly accepted, knowing that in the event of an unfavorable verdict, he would hold a trump card entitling him to a new trial.
Id. at 176 n. 2.
We see no reason why civil litigants who in most instances have only property or monetary interests at stake should not shoulder the same burden of preserving their claimed voir dire error as do criminal defendants whose very liberty interests are at stake. Indeed, it would be a manifest injustice for us to conclude otherwise. Accordingly, based upon the appellants’ failure to make and/or renew their objections being asserted on this appeal prior to the jury being sworn, we conclude that they have not preserved the same for appellate review. We therefore affirm the final judgment under review.
In light of our affirmance of this judgment, we do not reach the issue raised on the cross-appeal.
Affirmed.