Chestnut, Steven J. v. Hall, Terry ( 2002 )


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  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 01-2430
    Steven J. Chestnut, Kimberly M. Cunningham
    and Bary L. Brown,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    Officer Terry Hall, Individually as a
    Sergeant for the Indianapolis Police
    Department; Officer Ron Burgess,
    Individually as an Officer for the
    Indianapolis Police Department; and
    Officer David Neal, Individually
    as an Officer for the Indianapolis Police
    Department; and the City of Indianapolis,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
    No. IP00-0525--John D. Tinder, Judge.
    Argued January 17, 2002--Decided April 1, 2002
    Before Flaum, Chief Judge, Bauer and
    Easterbrook, Circuit Judges.
    Bauer, Circuit Judge. The plaintiffs-
    appellants filed suit against the
    defendants-appellees, claiming
    constitutional rights violations. The
    case went to trial and a jury returned a
    verdict in favor of the appellees and
    against the appellants on all claims. On
    appeal, the appellants argue that the
    district court abused its discretion in
    excluding evidence of a witness’s past
    misconduct and in submitting flawed
    instructions to the jury. For the
    following reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment
    of the district court.
    Background
    The appellants are supporters of the
    International Brotherhood of Teamsters, a
    union that orchestrated a strike and
    established a picket line outside of the
    Overnite Transportation Company’s
    ("Overnite") Indianapolis facility
    toprotest claimed unfair labor practices
    in late 1999. Wackenhut Corporation
    ("Wackenhut"), a private security firm,
    was hired by Overnite to provide security
    during the strike, which was by all
    accounts riddled with clashes between the
    union supporters and Overnite employees.
    One such incident occurred on the night
    of December 17, 1999. At approximately
    10:00 p.m., Paul Tutsie, a former police
    officer employed as a supervisor by
    Wackenhut, contacted Sergeant Terry Hall
    of the Indianapolis Police Department.
    Tutsie informed Hall that one of his
    subordinates then working the Overnite
    location reported that strikers were
    vandalizing Overnite property. In
    particular, Tutsie told Hall that one of
    his subordinates reported that some
    strikers were throwing down nails in
    front of the main gate in an effort to
    block non-striking truckers from entering
    and exiting. In response to Tutsie’s
    call, Hall called for backup and
    proceeded to the Overnite facility.
    Upon arriving at Overnite, Hall,
    followed by Officers David Neal and Ron
    Burgess, approached the picket line.
    Standing near Overnite’s front entrance
    were all three appellants, Steven J.
    Chestnut, Kimberly M. Cunningham and Bary
    L. Brown, and a fourth individual, Bruce
    Hamilton. What happened next is not
    altogether clear. The appellants complain
    that they were "seized, searched and
    intimidated" by the appellees "without
    probable cause, a warrant, the consent of
    the individuals, or exigent
    circumstances." Though the appellees
    concede that they did not have a search
    warrant when investigating the report of
    vandalism at Overnite, they argue that no
    unlawful search or seizure occurred
    because (i) their actions were nothing
    more than a protective pat-down for
    weapons as a result of a lawful
    investigatory stop; (ii) even if their
    conduct amounted to a search, each of the
    appellants voluntarily consented;/1 and
    (iii) there existed probable cause that a
    crime was being or had been committed,
    and there existed exigent circumstances.
    After a three day jury trial and
    verdict, the district court entered final
    judgment in favor of the appellees on May
    11, 2001. The appellants now seek
    reversal, arguing that the district court
    abused its discretion in excluding
    evidence of a defense witness’s past
    misconduct and in submitting flawed
    instructions to the jury. We find these
    arguments unavailing.
    Discussion
    A.   Excluded Evidence
    Prior to trial, the appellants and the
    appellees filed several motions in
    limine. At issue here is the appellees’
    first motion in limine, which sought an
    order excluding any evidence that witness
    Paul Tutsie was involved in an incident
    known as the "Meridian Street Police
    Brawl" when he was employed by the
    Indiana Police Department. In support of
    their motion, the appellees argued that
    any such evidence was irrelevant to the
    appellants’ claims and its introduction
    would be unduly prejudicial. The district
    court granted the appellees’ motion,
    finding Tutsie’s involvement in the
    Meridian Street Police Brawl "clearly
    irrelevant to any issue in this case." We
    agree.
    The Federal Rules of Evidence define
    "relevant evidence" as "evidence having
    any tendency to make the existence of a
    fact that is of consequence to the
    determination of the action more probable
    or less probable than it would be without
    the evidence." Fed. R. Evid. 401 (emphasis
    added). Evidence of Tutsie’s involvement
    in the Meridian Street Police Brawl is of
    no consequence to the determination of
    this action, nor can such evidence
    reasonably be said to have any tendency
    making the existence of a fact that is of
    consequence more or less probable.
    Tutsie’s role on the night of December
    17, 1999, was limited to relaying
    information received from a subordinate
    at Wackenhut that strikers were
    vandalizing Overnite property. As the
    district court noted, Tutsie was not even
    present at the scene when the events
    giving rise to this lawsuit occurred.
    Evidence of past misconduct by a witness
    whose narrow testimony has no bearing at
    all on the ultimate determination of the
    action is properly excluded under Rule
    401. The district court in no way abused
    its discretion in excluding evidence of
    Tutsie’s past misconduct in this case.
    B.   Jury Instructions
    The appellants also argue that the
    district court committed reversible error
    in submitting flawed instructions on
    warrantless searches. Specifically, the
    appellants claim that Final Instructions
    20 and 23 set forth incorrect statements
    of the law. With respect to Final
    Instruction 20, the appellants concede
    that they did not object to this
    instruction on the record at trial as
    required by Rule 51 of the Federal Rules
    of Civil Procedure. Fed. R. Civ. P. 51 ("At
    the close of the evidence or at such
    earlier time during the trial as the
    court directs . . . [n]o party may assign
    as error the giving or the failure to
    give an instruction unless that party ob
    jects thereto before the jury retires to
    consider its verdict, stating distinctly
    the matter objected to and the grounds of
    the objection."). Failure to challenge a
    jury instruction in a civil case results
    in a waiver and precludes appellate
    review. Haley v. Gross, 
    86 F.3d 630
    , 644
    (7th Cir. 1996); Nat’l Org. for Women,
    Inc. v. Scheidler, 
    267 F.3d 687
    , 704 (7th
    Cir. 2001) ("[In] a civil trial, not a
    criminal trial, there is no equivalent of
    ’plain error’ review for a challenge that
    is forfeited rather than waived.").
    Notwithstanding, the appellants assert
    that Final Instruction 20 is properly
    subject to appellate review because they
    objected to a similar instruction in the
    appellees’ proposed jury instructions. We
    are unpersuaded.
    Rule 51 requires not only that
    objections to jury instructions be made
    in a timely fashion and on the record,
    but also with sufficient specificity to
    apprise the district court of the legal
    and factual bases for any perceived
    defect. See, e.g., Knox v. State of
    Indiana, 
    93 F.3d 1327
    , 1332 (7th Cir.
    1996) (denying appellate review to party
    whose instruction objection was not
    specific enough to alert trial court to
    argument set forth on appeal); Maltby v.
    Winston, 
    36 F.3d 548
    , 560 (7th Cir. 1994)
    (Rule 51 requires a specific objection on
    the record). The specificity requirement
    facilitates one of the basic purposes of
    Rule 51; to give district courts the
    opportunity to amend erroneous jury
    instructions, thereby avoiding the need
    for further review and potential retrial.
    See 
    Haley, 86 F.3d at 644
    . Objecting to a
    "similar" proposed instruction hardly
    satisfies this requirement. To so hold
    would be no different than allowing the
    appellant to rely on a general objection,
    which is insufficient under Rule 51. See
    
    Knox, 93 F.3d at 1332
    ; 
    Maltby, 36 F.3d at 560
    ; 
    Haley, 86 F.3d at 644
    . Because the
    appellants failed to satisfy the
    requirements of Rule 51, any argument
    regarding Final Instruction 20 is waived.
    See Susan Wakeen Doll Co. v. Ashton-Drake
    Galleries, 
    272 F.3d 441
    , 453 (7th Cir.
    2001).
    The appellants’ objection to Final
    Instruction 23 is likewise waived. In
    arguing that Final Instruction 23
    isproperly subject to appellate review
    under Rule 51, the appellants again rely
    on an objection to a proposed instruction
    containing language similar to that in
    Final Instruction 23. As discussed,
    however, objections to similar
    instructions are insufficient to satisfy
    Rule 51’s requirements.
    Additionally, the appellants assert that
    because they did object to Final
    Instruction 23 during the jury
    instruction conference, albeit on a
    different basis than that for which they
    now seek review, they should nonetheless
    be able to argue a new error on appeal.
    Not so. A party’s failure to object to
    even that portion of a jury instruction
    questioned on appeal results in a waiver
    under Rule 51. See Gagan v. Am.
    Cablevision, Inc., 
    77 F.3d 951
    , 966 (7th
    Cir. 1996) (finding Rule 51 objection
    waived where party conceded that he did
    not object to that portion of the jury
    instruction questioned on appeal); Susan
    Wakeen Doll 
    Co., 272 F.3d at 453
    (party
    waived any appellate argument regarding
    clause to which no objection was made at
    instruction conference); cf. 
    Knox, 93 F.3d at 1334
    ("We agree . . . that the
    State’s trial objection was not specific
    enough to alert the district court to the
    more refined argument it is now making
    [on appeal], and thus that the objection
    did not meet the requirements of Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 51."). The appellants have waived
    their Rule 51 objection and Final
    Instruction 23 is beyond the scope of
    review.
    The appellants also assert that they
    twice argued the substantive problems
    they had with the law ultimately set
    forth in Final Instruction 23 during the
    presentation of evidence. The assertion
    that these evidentiary arguments serve as
    or excuse a formal Rule 51 objection does
    not bar waiver in this case. A party may
    be excused from complying with the
    formalities of Rule 51 where: (1) the
    party’s position has been previously made
    clear to the court; and (2) further
    objection would be unavailing and futile.
    Carter v. Chicago Police Officers M.L.,
    
    165 F.3d 1071
    , 1078 (7th Cir. 1998)
    (citations omitted). Even if we were to
    assume that the appellants’ arguments
    regarding Final Instruction 23 were made
    sufficiently clear to the district court
    (which is questionable), the appellants
    have made absolutely no showing that a
    timely, specific and formal Rule 51
    objection would have been unavailing and
    futile. This is especially true where, as
    here, the appellants were afforded and
    failed to seize the opportunity to make a
    specific, formal objection during the
    instruction conference at trial.
    Lastly, the appellants filed a Statement
    of Proceedings pursuant to Rule 10(c) of
    the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure
    in order to incorporate an objection they
    made to proposed Instruction No. 23 at a
    pre-trial conference into the record on
    appeal. After the appellees filed a
    Verified Response, the district court
    entered an order settling the record that
    acknowledges the appellants’ objection to
    proposed Instruction No. 23 but questions
    the applicability of Rule 10(c) to pre-
    trial conferences. See Fed. R. App. P.
    10(c) ("If the transcript of a hearing or
    trial is unavailable, the appellant may
    prepare a statement of the evidence or
    proceedings . . . .") (emphasis added).
    We need not address the applicability of
    Rule 10(c) to such a proceeding, however,
    because the appellants’ earlier comments
    do not cure their failure to later record
    a formal objection to Instruction No. 23
    during the instruction conference. Rule
    51 requires that specific objections be
    made on the record "[a]t the close of the
    evidence or at such earlier time during
    the trial as the court reasonably
    directs." Fed. R. Civ. P. 51 (emphasis
    added). In accordance with Rule 51, the
    judge here afforded the appellants the
    full opportunity to alert the court to
    their objections so that any errors could
    be corrected prior to deliberations. The
    appellants chose not to voice their
    objections to Instruction 23’s statement
    of the law on warrantless searches when
    reasonably directed to do so by the
    court. The appellants ignored the
    mandates of Rule 51 and in so doing,
    waived any objection to Final Instruction
    23.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the district court is
    hereby AFFIRMED.
    FOOTNOTE
    /1 In addition to consent, the appellees answered
    the appellants’ allegations with several affirma-
    tive defenses: (1) good faith; (2) the appel-
    lants’ own negligence; (3) no action for damages
    under the Indiana Constitution; (4) qualified
    immunity; and (5) immunity from tort liability
    under Indiana statute for the enforcement of a
    law.