Loyd Wright sued Harris County on behalf of Jimmie Lee O’Neal for violations of O’Neal’s rights under the United States Constitution. Wright appeals the denial of his challenge to a peremptory jury strike, and we affirm.
I.
O’Neal died shortly after leaving the custody of Harris County after an arrest for suspected possession of a controlled substance. Wright, as administrator of the estate, sued the county to recover wrongful death damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. At jury selection, the county used one of its peremptory strikes to eliminate Juror Number Eight, who was the only black venireman with a realistic chance to serve on the jury.
After the jury was called to the jury box, the district court asked whether there was any reason why it should not be empaneled. Wright asserted that striking Juror Number Eight violated
Batson v. Kentucky,
Later that day, Juror Number Thirteen fell asleep during trial. On reviewing his questionnaire for any problem or conflict with his occupation that might explain his behavior, the court discovered that Number Thirteen, who is white, had not finished high school. The next day, the court called a bench conference to explain that its ruling on the Batson challenge “may have been erroneous,” and it returned to counsel the juror questionnaires “for purposes of any appeal.”
*438 On the fifth day of trial, the jury returned a verdict for Harris County. After final judgment was entered, Wright moved for a new trial, reasserting the Batson challenge on the ground that the county’s explanation was pretextual, given that Number Thirteen had not even finished high school. Wright did not respond to the county’s second reason for the strike, that Number Eight appeared disinterested and was mumbling to herself. The county responded that it kept Number Thirteen because that juror had worked for the same employer for thirty years and that the “school of hard knocks” counted in his favor, but Number Eight had been a bus driver for a local school district and appeared disinterested in the proceedings on more than one occasion.
The district court denied Wright’s motion, finding sufficient evidence to support the verdict. Although the court reversed its earlier Batson ruling, finding that Harris County had “lied to the Court about their reasons for striking # 8,” the court found that there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict despite the erroneous Batson ruling.
II.
Wright moved for a new trial under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59, which allows for a new trial under certain circumstances. A denial of a motion for a new trial under rule 59(a) is ordinarily not appealable.
Gov’t Fin. Servs. One Ltd. P’ship v. Peyton Place, Inc.,
Wright waived his
Batson
claim, however, by failing to rebut the county’s reasons for striking Juror Number Eight at the time he raised his claim. In
United States v. Arce,
At the time he first raised the
Batson
challenge, Wright disputed neither of the county’s reasons for the strike, even though he had access to the jurors’ questionnaires that day and could have discerned that Juror Number Thirteen had not finished high school. Because he waited until the motion for new trial to rebut the county’s explanation for the peremptory strike, the
Batson
challenge is waived.
See Auster Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Stream,
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment and GRANT Wright’s motion to supplement the record.
