Court Opinion

ID: 4361034
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-01-23 16:09:27.408935+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:48:12.044708
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                      No. 17-1001
                                Filed January 23, 2019

SUSAN K. MORRISON, EXECUTOR ON BEHALF OF THE ESTATE OF MAX L.
MORRISON, SUSAN K. MORRISON, EXECUTOR ON BEHALF OF SUSAN K.
MORRISON, SUSAN K. MORRISON, EXECUTOR ON BEHALF OF BRIAN L.
MORRISON AND MICHAEL S. MORRISON,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

GRUNDY COUNTY RURAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE,
     Defendant-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Tama County, Mitchell E. Turner,

Judge.

      Plaintiffs in negligence action appeal a jury verdict finding the rural electric

cooperative at fault after a plane crash but finding no causation. AFFIRMED.

      John R. Walker Jr. of Beecher, Field, Walker, Morris, Hoffman & Johnson,

PC, Waterloo, for appellants.

      Joseph G. Gamble and Gregory R. Brown of Duncan, Green, Brown &

Langeness, PC, Des Moines, for appellee.

      Heard by Tabor, P.J., and Mullins and Bower, JJ.
                                         2

TABOR, Presiding Judge.

       The plaintiffs1 allege the Grundy County Rural Electric Cooperative

(GCREC) was liable for the death of Max Morrison, a passenger in an airplane that

crashed after striking a power line. A jury found the GCREC acted negligently but

its negligence did not cause the crash. The Morrisons raise numerous grounds for

reversal. We resolve most of their claims on error preservation or harmless error.

We reach the merits of one issue—finding the district court properly instructed the

jury on the GCREC’s scope of liability. Accordingly, we affirm.

    I. Facts and Prior Proceedings.

       In November 2012, a plane piloted by William Konicek and carrying

passenger Max Morrison crashed into a farm field outside Clutier in Tama County.

The accident occurred when the front wheels of the plane—a “light sport aircraft”—

tangled with electrical wires suspended on poles above the land. Konicek died at

the scene. Morrison was able to walk out of the wreckage but suffered severe

burns. He spent forty-one days in the burn unit at the University of Iowa Hospitals

and Clinics before succumbing to his injuries.

       To explain Konicek’s choice of this landing strip, we must turn the clock

back to 1984. Then-landowner Richard Merkel sat on the GCREC board. He was

a hobby pilot and asked the GCREC to bury the power lines bordering his property

to permit safe access to a grass airstrip he kept alongside the road. He created

and maintained the airstrip by leveling the land and mowing the grass short.

Acceding to Merkel’s wishes, the GCREC buried the power lines under the road.

1
 The plaintiffs are Max Morrison’s estate; his wife, Susan; and adult sons, Brian and
Michael. We will refer to the family collectively as the Morrisons in this opinion.
                                            3

The 1984 project’s permit application states, “Reason for [change] is removing

overhead line for clearance for Richard Merkel airstrip.” Merkel and Konicek were

childhood friends. They enjoyed building and flying planes together.

       In 1989, Merkel divorced, and the decree awarded the property to his ex-

wife, Ila Yung.2 At trial, Yung testified that during their marriage the couple owned

a plane and used their personal landing strip for about five years. She testified the

airstrip was not for public access, but several friends did use it on occasion. She

said Konicek landed there twice. In 1991, Yung enrolled the land in the United

States Department of Agriculture Conservation Reserve Program (CRP). The

CRP prohibits the use of encumbered land for crops and other purposes, including

aviation.

       Yung testified the strip was last used for aviation in 1989. Since then, no

one had asked her permission to land on the property and she was not aware of

any aircraft doing so.3 Had anyone asked permission, Yung testified she would

have said no. At the time of the crash, the land was covered in switch grass, which

Yung estimated could grow three feet tall. But in the summer of 2012, Yung

obtained “emergency haying” permission from CRP officials. Yung had the grass

mowed in August, but testified it had grown by the time of the crash in November.

The hangar where Merkel previously housed his plane now stored hay.

2
  Yung testified she was born on that property in 1937 and grew up there. She and Merkel
spent about twenty-five years away serving in the military. In 1980, they returned and
purchased the land from her parents. She lived on the property continuously since then.
3
  She testified, based on the location of her house, she would hear anyone trying to land:
“It would be pretty loud.”
                                              4

       For two decades after the GCREC buried the power lines in 1984,

customers complained increasingly of power outages.4 In 2008, the GCREC

applied for federal funds to improve service on its nearly one hundred miles of

electrical wires, including those adjacent to the Yung property. The GCREC retired

the old power lines and installed new ones suspended above ground on thirty-foot

poles. As part of the project, the GCREC was required to obtain numerous permits

and approvals.5 The GCREC successfully obtained each one—except for a permit

from Tama County for the land adjacent to the Yung property, required under Tama

County Ordinance #IV.4. At trial, the GCREC operating manager admitted not

seeking this permit. Despite not obtaining the permit, the GCREC completed the

project in May 2012, several months before Morrison’s fatal crash.

       In November 2014, the Morrisons sued the GCREC6 for negligence in Max’s

death. After extensive pretrial litigation, the claims went before a jury. For eight

days, the parties offered evidence on the GCREC’s alleged duties, the condition

and status of the land where the crash occurred, and the comparative fault of

Konicek and Morrison. At the close of the plaintiffs’ case and again at the close of

all evidence, the Morrisons unsuccessfully moved for directed verdict.

4
   Both the current and retired operations managers for the GCREC testified buried
electrical lines are more prone to outages than above-ground lines.
5
  The current operating manager testified the improvement project actually consisted of
thirty-five separate subprojects, each one requiring an individual permit. The GCREC
obtained thirty-four permits—the one pertaining to this subproject “was overlooked.” The
operating manager testified, “I do have a permit that I filled out, I signed, I dated. Normally
I would have e-mailed this to the county. I made a mistake or forgot it. I don’t know what
I did . . . but it was an oversight on my part.”
6
  The Morrisons originally named several other defendants in the action but dismissed
them before trial.
                                            5

        The court instructed the jury on negligence, the GCREC’s scope of liability,

the comparative fault of Konicek and Morrison, and damages. The jury deliberated

for less than three hours, asked no questions, and rendered a unanimous verdict.

       The verdict form set out these questions:

              Question No. 1: Was Grundy County Rural Electric
       Cooperative at fault?
              Answer “yes” or “no.”
              ANSWER: ___________ [If your answer to Question No. 1 is
       “no,” do not Answer any further questions.]

              Question No. 2: Was Grundy County Rural Electric
       Cooperative’s fault a cause of any damage to the Plaintiffs? Answer
       “yes” or “no.”
              ANSWER: __________ [If your answer to Question 2 is “no,”
       do not answer any further questions.]

(Brackets included in original.) On the fault question, the jury answered, “Yes.”

The jury did not specify on which of the four possible grounds set out in Instruction

No. 14 it found the GCREC at fault. On the causation question, the jury answered,

“No.” As commanded by the instructions, the jury did not answer any further

questions directed at the scope of the GCREC’s liability, the comparative fault of

Konicek or Morrison, or the amount of damages. The court gave no special

interrogatories, and the parties did not poll the jury after its verdict.

       The Morrisons filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict

(JNOV). The court denied the motion and entered judgment for the GCREC. The

Morrisons now appeal—raising numerous claims.               In response, the GCREC

contends we need not address any error the Morrisons allege concerning fault or

comparative fault because any error would be harmless. The GCREC also raises

several error-preservation challenges.
                                         6

   II. Scope and Standards of Review

       If we were to reach the merits of the issues raised, we would apply the

following standards of review. For rulings on motions for directed verdict, we

review for correction of legal error. Easton v. Howard, 751 N.W.2d 1, 5 (Iowa

2008). We check most evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion, meaning we

assess whether the district court exercised its discretion on grounds or for reasons

clearly untenable or to an extent clearly unreasonable. See Heinz v. Heinz, 653

N.W.2d 334, 338 (Iowa 2002).         And we review decisions concerning jury

instructions for correction of legal error when there is not a discretionary

component. Andersen v. Khanna, 913 N.W.2d 526, 536 (Iowa 2018). “Iowa law

requires a court to give a requested jury instruction if it correctly states the

applicable law and is not embodied in other instructions.” Alcala v. Marriott Int’l,

Inc., 880 N.W.2d 699, 707 (Iowa 2016) (quoting Sonnek v. Warren, 522 N.W.2d

45, 47 (Iowa 1994)). “[E]rror in giving or refusing jury instructions does not merit

reversal unless it results in prejudice to the defendant.” Struve v. Payvandi, 740

N.W.2d 436, 439 (Iowa 2007).

   III. Threshold Issue: Harmless Error on Fault and Comparative Fault

       Given the jury’s finding that the GCREC acted negligently but that its

negligence did not cause the plane crash, we face a gatekeeping dilemma—

whether to reach the substance of the Morrisons’ claims that bear on fault or

comparative fault. The GCREC argues any allegations related to its negligence,

even if meritorious, were cured when the jury ultimately found it was at fault. In

the GCREC’s view, because the jury reached a favorable result for the Morrisons

on fault, any alleged error impacting that aspect of the verdict was harmless and
                                         7

need not be addressed on appeal. The GCREC also contends alleged errors that

bear on comparative fault are harmless because once the jurors decided the

GCREC’s negligence was not a cause of the crash, the instructions did not permit

them to consider the relative negligence of Konicek and Morrison.

       To analyze these harmless-error claims, we look to the mechanics of the

jury’s negligence finding. To prevail, the Morrisons had to show the GCREC had

a duty to conform to a standard of conduct and failed to do so. See Estate of

Gottschalk by Gottschalk v. Pomeroy Dev., Inc., 893 N.W.2d 579, 586 (Iowa 2017).

Jury Instruction No. 14 allowed the jury to find the GCREC was negligent in one or

more of four particulars:

              1. GCREC failed to bury the powers lines “to eliminate the risk
       created by their proximity to the . . . airstrip”;
              2. GCREC failed to “warn members of the aviation public”
       about putting up the wires;
              3. GCREC failed to place warning markers on the lines
       “designed to warn aircraft pilots and passengers” about the lines “in
       proximity to the . . . airstrip,” and/or
              4. GCREC failed to obtain a permit from the Tama County
       Board of Supervisors before constructing the overhead power lines.

The first three grounds are predicated on a duty the GCREC may have owed users

of the airstrip or of the nearby airspace. In contrast, the fourth ground does not

involve a duty to the aviation public or to pilots and passengers. It addresses only

the legal obligation to obtain the correct permit from the county before embarking

on a public utility project. The record does not reflect which ground or grounds the

jury embraced. And neither party requested a special interrogatory to unmask the

jury’s thinking.
                                              8

       Generally, we construe verdicts liberally “to give effect to the intention of the

jury and to harmonize the verdicts if it is possible to do so.”7 Holdsworth v. Nissly,

520 N.W.2d 332, 337 (Iowa Ct. App. 1994) (citing Hoffman v. Nat’l Med. Enters.,

Inc., 442 N.W.2d 123, 126 (Iowa 1989)). The Morrisons do not dispute that

substantial evidence supported the jury’s findings. Nor do they suggest the two

verdicts are inconsistent. Instead, they contend (1) legal errors prejudiced their

case on fault, despite receiving a favorable verdict on that element, and

(2) evidence of comparative fault influenced the jury’s decision on causation.

       The GCREC rests its argument on this longstanding tenet: “When a court

denies a party’s motion for a directed verdict and the jury finds in that party’s favor

on the issue upon which the party requested a directed verdict, there can be no

prejudice to the moving party in light of the jury’s verdict.” See Crow v. Simpson,

871 N.W.2d 98, 107–08 (Iowa 2015) (citing Spry v. Lamont, 132 N.W.2d 446, 449

(Iowa 1965)); see also Brant v. Bockholt, 532 N.W.2d 801, 803 (Iowa 1995) (“This

court has consistently held that errors against a party are cured by a verdict in that

party’s favor unless the error was prejudicial with respect to the amount of

recovery.”); Edgren v. Scandia Coal Co., 151 N.W. 519, 524–25 (Iowa 1915) (“The

plaintiff having finally won the verdict, such rulings of the court, even if erroneous,

were necessarily nonprejudicial.”); Thew v. Miller, 36 N.W. 771, 772 (Iowa 1888).

7
  Although this issue was not raised on appeal, the verdicts can be reconciled. The jury
could have found, as a factual matter, the crash site was not an airstrip. Thus, the GCREC
would have no duty to warn pilots of the electrical lines but was at fault only for failure to
obtain the required permit, an error that former and current GCREC employees admitted
at trial. Because sufficient evidence supported a finding the GCREC would have obtained
the permit anyway, the verdict that its failure to do so was not a cause of the crash would
be supported by substantial evidence. See Garr v. City of Ottumwa, 846 N.W.2d 865, 869
(Iowa 2014).
                                           9

       In Crow, the plaintiff alleged he was injured because a contractor was

negligent in not adequately warning passersby of construction equipment parked

on the roadway. 871 N.W.2d at 104. The jury found the contractor was negligent

but that negligence was not a cause of Crow’s injury. Id. Our supreme court

upheld the verdicts. Id. at 105–07.

       The Morrisons allege Crow is not controlling because in their motion for

directed verdict they asked only for a finding that the GCREC failed in a duty to

warn of the overhead power lines. Yet the instructions allowed the jury to find the

GCREC negligent on any one of four grounds, not all of which involved a duty to

warn, and the general verdict obscured the basis of the jury’s decision. The

Morrisons urge us to consider the negligence grounds charged in the motion.

       Our case law directs that errors bearing on fault are remedied by a favorable

verdict, unless they go to the amount of recovery, which is not the case here. See

Brant, 532 N.W.2d at 803. In addition, like the Morrisons, Crow argued the district

court erred in not granting his motion for directed verdict on a negligence per se

theory, and our supreme court still determined he was not prejudiced. See Crow,

871 N.W.2d at 104. Applying the Crow rule, it does not matter on which basis the

jury found the GCREC negligent—we can presume the jury found one or all

grounds met. The jury sided with the Morrisons on the question of fault, and any

errors going to a specific ground did not result in prejudice. Accordingly, we need

not dissect the merits of the claims bearing on fault.8

8
 As appellants, the Morrisons bear the burden of proving each alleged error on the record
made at trial. The ambiguity about what ground or grounds of negligence the jury found
precludes them from showing how they were prejudiced by the alleged errors. Special
                                           10

       We reach a similar result on the Morrisons’ claims regarding the

comparative fault evidence. Where a jury finds no causal fault and, per the

instructions, does not answer questions on comparative fault, any alleged error

regarding comparative fault is harmless. See DeMoss v. Hamilton, 644 N.W.2d

302, 307 (Iowa 2002).

       Still, the Morrisons insist the comparative fault evidence influenced the

jury’s verdict on causation. It is true the GCREC’s case focused on comparative

fault. Particularly contentious was evidence the pilot, Konicek, had bipolar disorder

and may have experienced a manic episode before the crash. But to accept the

Morrisons’ position would be to abandon the deference accorded jury findings.

See Holdsworth, 520 N.W.2d at 337. Jury Instruction No. 14 and Question No. 2

asked whether the GCREC’s fault was a cause of damage to the Morrisons, not

the sole cause or a major cause. The jury answered no. We presume juries follow

their instructions. Kinseth v. Weil-McLain, 913 N.W.2d 55, 73 (Iowa 2018). We

need not decide the merits of the comparative-fault issues.

   IV. Analysis

       A. Duty to Warn

       Error Preservation. The Morrisons contend the district court should have

found as a matter of law that the GCREC had a duty to warn the public of the power

lines surrounding the airstrip. The Morrisons allege they preserved error on this

claim by raising it in their motion for partial summary judgment, which they renewed

with their motion for directed verdict at trial.        The GCREC contests error

interrogatories would have offered greater clarity, but appellants cannot now profit from
the ambiguity.
                                         11

preservation, claiming the Morrisons did not renew their request with sufficient

specificity when seeking a directed verdict nor did they mention the duty-to-warn

in their JNOV motion.

       “It is a fundamental doctrine of appellate review that issues must ordinarily

be both raised and decided by the district court before we will decide them on

appeal.” Meier v. Senecaut, 641 N.W.2d 532, 537 (Iowa 2002). “[A] motion for

judgment notwithstanding the verdict serves to afford the district court an

opportunity to correct any error in failing to direct a verdict.” Rife v. D.T. Corner,

Inc., 641 N.W.2d 761, 767 (Iowa 2002). We confine our review to those issues

raised in the motion for directed verdict that were raised again after the jury

reached its verdict. See id. “Error must be raised with some specificity.” Pavone

v. Kirke, 801 N.W.2d 477, 487 (Iowa 2011).

       In their motions for summary judgment and directed verdict at the close of

their evidence, the Morrisons argued the GCREC had a duty to warn members of

the aviation public about the overhead power lines. We find plaintiffs’ counsel was

sufficiently specific in arguing for a directed verdict, urging that the GCREC had “a

duty to mark the line and that wasn’t done.” The district court then ruled, “There is

clearly evidence in this record from which a reasonable jury could conclude there

was not a duty owed to either Mr. Morrison or Mr. Konicek by the [GCREC].”

       But in their JNOV motion, the Morrisons acknowledged the jury decided the

GCREC was at fault but caused no damages—without revisiting their request for

the court to find a duty to warn as a matter of law. Because they did not renew

that argument in the JNOV motion, the district court did not address whether the

verdict was supported. We have no ruling to review.
                                         12

       Harmlessness. Even if the Morrisons had preserved error, the duty-to-

warn question was allayed by the fault verdict. For the reasons articulated above,

the Morrisons cannot show prejudice when they received a favorable verdict. They

maintain had the district court directed a verdict that the GCREC had a duty to

warn the aviation public, the jury would have come to a different conclusion as to

causation. But both issues were properly submitted as jury questions, and the split

verdict must stand.

       B. Evidence of Konicek’s Bipolar Disorder.

       Error Preservation. The Morrisons assert the district court abused its

discretion in allowing the GCREC to present evidence that the pilot, Konicek, had

been diagnosed with bipolar disorder. We will assume without deciding that the

Morrisons properly preserved this issue for review.

       Harmlessness. The evidence of Konicek’s mental health did not have any

bearing on whether the GCREC’s negligence was a cause of the crash. Instead,

the disputed evidence went to the comparative fault of Konicek and Morrison. As

noted above, because the jury stopped with the causation question, the Morrisons

cannot show prejudice from the comparative fault evidence.

       C. Jury Instructions.

       The Morrisons dispute several jury instructions, including six instructions

given by the district court and two instructions the court declined to give.

                         1. Instruction No. 36: Cause.

       Error Preservation. First, they assert Jury Instruction No. 36 wrongly

stated the law and the court should have given their proposed instruction that more
                                              13

closely followed the language of the Iowa Civil Jury Instructions. 9 The GCREC

argues a failure to preserve error because the Morrisons did not object to the cause

instruction when they had the chance to do so.

          The Morrisons contend it was sufficient to submit their own proposed

instructions. We disagree. “When instructions are not objected to, they become

‘the law of the case.’” In re Estate of Workman, 903 N.W.2d 170, 175 (Iowa 2017).

Grounds for objection must be made “in writing or dictated into the record.” Iowa

R. Civ. P. 1.924. The district court submitted proposed instructions and gave the

parties ample time to object. Without objecting to the court’s proposals, the

Morrisons did not preserve error by submitting their own proposed instructions.

See Bauer v. Cole, 467 N.W.2d 221, 224–25 (Iowa 1991). Accordingly, we decline

to reach the merits of this issue.

                             2. Instructions Nos. 20 and 21: Comparative Fault.

          Harmlessness. The Morrisons object to the instructions on comparative

fault. Because the jury did not reach the question of comparative fault, and for the

reasons stated above, we will not address this issue.

                             3. Instruction No. 30: Open and Obvious Hazard.

          Harmlessness. The Morrisons also allege the evidence was insufficient to

instruct the jury on open and obvious hazards. Instruction No. 30 advised, “[T]he

defendant had no duty to warn another of any hazardous or dangerous conditions

9
    Instruction No. 36 [defining cause]
                  The conduct of a party is a cause of damage when it is a substantial
          factor in producing damage and when the damage would not have
          happened except for the conduct.
                  “Substantial” means the party’s conduct has such an effect in
          producing damage as to lead a reasonable person to regard it as a cause.
                                          14

which are open and obvious.” The instruction relates to the GCREC’s duty—an

issue on which the jury rendered a verdict favorable to the Morrisons. Accordingly,

as discussed above, the error alleged was harmless.

                         4. Instructions No. 31 and No. 32: Scope of Liability.

       The Morrisons contend the district court erred in giving Instructions No. 31

and No. 32 on scope of liability because the court should have determined as a

matter of law that Max’s death fell within the scope of the GCREC’s liability.

       Instruction No. 31 read:

              The Defendant is not liable as an insurer, and reasonable care
       does not require such precautions as will absolutely prevent injury or
       render accidents impossible.
              A person acts negligently if the person does not exercise
       reasonable care under all the circumstances. Primary factors to
       consider in ascertaining whether the person’s conduct lacks
       reasonable care are the foreseeable likelihood to the Defendant at
       the time the Defendant acted in June of 2012 that the Defendant’s
       conduct will result in harm, the foreseeable severity at the time the
       Defendant acted of any harm that may ensue, and the burden of
       precautions to eliminate or reduce the risk of harm.

       Instruction No. 32 read:

                If you find that the Plaintiffs have proven the Defendant was
       negligent, you then must decide whether the injuries sustained by
       Max Morrison and his death are within the scope of the Defendant’s
       liability. The injuries sustained by Max Morrison and his death are
       within the scope of Defendant’s liability if his injuries and death arose
       from the same general types of danger that the Defendant should
       have taken reasonable steps to avoid.
                Consider whether repetition of Defendant’s conduct makes it
       more likely the harm that Max Morrison suffered would happen to
       another. If not, the harm is not within the scope of Defendant’s
       liability.

       A related verdict form asked:

       Question No. 3: Was the harm suffered by Max Morrison within the
       scope of Grundy Rural Electric Cooperative’s liability? Answer “yes”
       or “no.”
                                           15

              Answer: _________ [If your answer to Question No. 3 is “no,”
       do not answer any further questions.]

(Brackets in original.) The jury did not answer, having stopped as directed with

question No. 2.

       Because Instruction No. 31 defines negligence and the jury found the

GCREC was negligent, the Morrisons cannot show they suffered prejudice from

the giving of that instruction. See Struve, 740 N.W.2d at 439 (“[E]rror in giving or

refusing jury instructions does not merit reversal unless it results in

prejudice . . . .”). But Instruction No. 32 and Question No. 3 relate to causation—

a question on which the jury rendered a verdict unfavorable to the Morrisons. See

Thompson v. Kaczinski, 774 N.W.2d 829, 836–39 (Iowa 2009) (adopting the

Restatement (Third) of Torts and clarifying the role of the scope of liability).

Instructing on scope of liability had the potential to influence the jury’s causation

determination, so we must address the merits of the Morrisons’ claim.

       Merits. The Morrisons argue the district court should have determined as

a matter of law that Max’s fatal injuries were a foreseeable consequence of the

failure to warn the aviation public about the power lines, and thus, fell within the

GCREC’s scope of liability.

       Generally, “[a]n actor’s liability is limited to those harms that resulted from

the risks that made the actor’s conduct tortious.” Restatement (Third) of Torts:

Phys. & Emot. Harm § 29 (2010). Our supreme court explained “[t]he scope-of-

liability issue is fact-intensive as it requires consideration of the risks that made the

actor’s conduct tortious and a determination of whether the harm at issue is a result

of any of those risks.” Thompson, 744 N.W.2d at 838.
                                         16

       Here, the district court properly submitted the scope-of-liability question to

the jury. Again, the key fact in dispute was the crash site status. If it remained an

airstrip, that status triggered both a duty to warn and a foreseeable risk to the

aviation public from a breach of that duty. The Morrisons were not entitled to a

directed verdict on the duty to warn, and the same conflicting evidence generated

a jury question on whether the harm fell within the GCREC’s scope of liability.

                        5. Proposed Jury Instructions.

       Harmlessness. The Morrisons next contend the district court erred in

declining to give two proposed instructions—one on electrical utilities having a

higher duty of care and another on negligence per se for the GCREC’s failure to

obtain a permit under the Tama County ordinance. Both proposed instructions

addressed fault, and, therefore, the Morrisons cannot show prejudice from their

absence. See Struve, 740 N.W.2d at 439.

       D. Advanced Rulings.

       Error Preservation. The Morrisons filed a motion in limine requesting

“advanced rulings” on four issues: (1) that the power lines constituted a public

nuisance; (2) that the GCREC was estopped from arguing the crash site was not

an airstrip; (3) that the GCREC had no legal authority to place the electrical lines

aboveground; and (4) to exclude evidence regarding the site’s CRP status. The

GCREC contends the Morrisons did not preserve error on these claims. We agree

that by not pursuing these issues beyond the pretrial ruling, the Morrisons failed to

preserve them for appeal.

       AFFIRMED.