Shirley Ann WATSON, Appellant,
v.
GULF POWER COMPANY, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*905 Stephen T. Holman and Tracey Scalfano Witt of Bridgers, Gill & Holman, Pensacola, for Appellant.
J. Nixon Daniel, III and James J. Crongeyer, Jr. of Beggs & Lane, Pensacola, for Appellee.
PER CURIAM.
Shirley Ann Watson appeals the denial of her motion for a new trial, arguing that the trial court erred in overruling, following a Neil[1] inquiry, her objection to the peremptory challenge to one venire person by appellee, Gulf Power Company, and in refusing to hold a Neil inquiry with respect to appellee's peremptory challenge of a second venire person. We affirm because the appellant did not preserve these issues for appellate review.
Although the appellant made the appropriate objections to the peremptory challenges of the two jurors, before the jury was sworn appellant did not renew the objections or accept the jury subject to the earlier objections. In Mitchell v. State,
[I]n order to preserve a Neil issue for review, it is necessary to call to the court's attention before the jury is sworn, by renewed motion or by accepting the jury subject to the earlier objection, the desire to preserve the issue.
By accepting the jury without calling the trial court's attention to the prior Neil objections, a party leads the court "to a reasonable assumption that he had abandoned, for whatever reason, his earlier objection." Joiner,
The Joiner procedural requirement applies in the instant action even though the trial court did not formally ask the parties whether the jury panel was acceptable and even though nothing the appellant did or said could reasonably have caused the trial court to believe that she had waived her earlier Neil objections to the peremptory challenges. See Salama v. McGregor,
AFFIRMED.
BOOTH and VAN NORTWICK, JJ., concur.
WOLF, J., concurs in result only.
NOTES
Notes
[1] State v. Neil,
