Precedential
Precedential
Precedential
OPINION
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THE COURT:
Well, thats true,
damages will still be an issue.
MR. KOBIN: Obviously I assume that
youre not directing a verdict on damages
against him.
THE COURT: Oh, no, only on liability.
MS. BENJAMIN[, COUNSEL FOR
THE CITY]: With respect to your ruling, the
question on damages come[s] with respect to
the City of Newark.
THE COURT: What did I do to the City
of Newark?
MS. BENJAMIN: The questions that
you have on damages, you indicate on the
[verdict] sheet if they find yes for 1, 2, 3,[3] or
4,[4] you have an issue of damages, and maybe
this is another issue. If youre directing them to
answer yes, for 1, 2[,] and 3, it may be Im
going to [suggest] to the Court that damages
need to be separate. There needs to be []
separate damages for Officer Borrero then, and
one for the City of Newark.
MR. KOBIN: No, your Honor, its
punitive damages as to Officer Borrero, which
would still be on the sheet.
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liability.
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concern over the jurys verdict sheet, stating its opinion that
[t]here needs to be [] separate damages for Officer Borrero
then, and one for the City of Newark. (J.A. 572.) But it
appears inarguable that the Citys objection was not clear and
cogent, that it was not sufficiently specific, and that it failed
to state the grounds upon which it rested.
We find support for this conclusion in both Lesendes
and the District Courts respective responses to the Citys
suggestion regarding separate damages. That suggestion
prompted only a brief discussion on tangentially related
issues, i.e., liability and punitive damages. Had the City
cogently presented its argument, as it has on appeal, then
logic and common sense dictate that either Lesende or the
District Court, or both, would have recognized and directly
responded to the Citys concern. At the very least, we are
hard-pressed to believe that the District Court would have
responded only by way of non sequitur.
Further, we find analogous support in our precedent.
In Chemical Leaman Tank Lines, supra, we held that an
objection to jury instructions was waived where an objection
was not presented with sufficient clarity to give the trial
judge notice of a possible error in the instruction. 89 F.3d at
993. Not only was the objection difficult to understand
because of its convoluted grammar, but the objection did not
specify the authority upon which it was based. Therefore . . .
[it] failed to comply with Rule 51s requirement that an
objection stat[e] distinctly . . . the grounds of the objection.
Id. (alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Zannino,
895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990)).
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