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Rule 51.Instructions to jury: Objection.

Last amended October 1, 1995 · Last verified July 6, 2026

In one sentenceRule 51 governs how the parties request jury instructions, how the court rules on those requests, and what a party must do -- object before the jury retires and state the specific grounds -- to preserve a complaint about the jury instructions for appeal.

Full Text of Rule 51

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At the close of the evidence or at such earlier time during the trial as the court reasonably directs, any party may file and, in such event, shall serve on all opposing parties written requests that the court instruct the jury on the law as set forth in the requests. The court shall inform counsel of its proposed action upon the requests prior to their arguments to the jury, but the court shall instruct the jury after the arguments are completed. The judge shall write “given” or “refused” as the case may be, on the request which thereby becomes a part of the record. Those requests marked “given” shall be read to the jury without reference as to which party filed the request. Neither the pleadings nor “given” written instructions shall go into the jury room. Every oral charge shall be taken down by the court reporter as it is delivered to the jury. The refusal of a requested, written instruction, although a correct statement of the law, shall not be cause for reversal on appeal if it appears that the same rule of law was substantially and fairly given to the jury in the court’s oral charge or in charges given at the request of the parties. No party may assign as error the giving or failing to give a written instruction, or the giving of an erroneous, misleading, incomplete, or otherwise improper oral charge unless that party objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating the matter objected to and the grounds of the objection. Submission of additional explanatory instructions shall not be required unless requested by the court. Additional instructions shall be submitted in writing, except that with respect to any additional instruction taken from Alabama Pattern Jury Instructions, it shall be sufficient to identify said instruction on the record by reference to the number and title of said pattern jury instruction. Opportunity shall be given to make the objection out of the hearing of the jury. In charging the jury, the court shall not express its opinion of the evidence.
(dc) District court rule. Rule 51 does not apply in the district courts.

Amendment History

[Amended 1-23-84, eff. 3-1-84; Amended eff. 10-1-95.]

Committee Comments

Committee Comments on 1973 Adoption

This Rule is based upon Federal Rule 51 but it does differ in several particulars. Basically, the rule is different in that 1) the charges are to be marked “given or refused”, 2) the oral charge can serve to cure errors in refusing written instructions, 3) pleadings and charges are not to be taken to the jury room, 4) the oral charge is to be reported, 5) broader grounds for objection to the oral charge are provided and 6) the court is not to comment on the evidence.

Former practice was regulated by Tit. 7, §§ 270-74, 818, Code of Ala. Under these statutes certain anomalous situations existed which are now eliminated. For example, Tit. 7, § 818 gave automatic exceptions to adverse rulings on requested written charges. This permitted a party to sit silently as an erroneous charge was given or a meritorious charge was refused after the court had sifted through numerous charges submitted by the parties. Should the court fail to cover the error in its oral charge, counsel could thereby preserve appellate relief in the event the jury verdict was unsatisfactory. Under this Rule, the party must, as a condition to the right to assert error on appeal, object and state grounds therefor before the jury retires. To facilitate the making of objections to requested written charges, the rule requires that they be served on all opposing parties. For proof of service under such circumstances, see the commentary to Rule 5(d). The rule also requires that opportunity be given for the making of such objection outside the presence of the jury.

Plain-English Summary

Before a jury can deliberate, the judge has to tell it what law applies to the case, and the parties get a say in shaping those instructions. Rule 51 sets up the process: parties submit written requests for instructions, usually by the close of the evidence or by whatever earlier deadline the court sets, and they must share those requests with the opposing side. The judge reviews the requests, tells the lawyers before closing arguments which requests will be given and which will be refused, and then instructs the jury only after the closing arguments are finished. Instructions the court accepts are read to the jury without saying which party asked for them, so jurors treat every instruction as the court’s own statement of the law rather than as one side’s argument.

The rule’s most consequential feature is what it demands from a party who thinks the judge got an instruction wrong. Requesting a different instruction, or grumbling about the charge afterward, is not enough. Before the jury retires to deliberate, the objecting party must object on the record, identify exactly what part of the instruction is being challenged, and explain the grounds for the objection — and the court must give the party a chance to do this outside the jury’s hearing. Skip that step, and the right to challenge the instruction on appeal is generally lost, even if the instruction was wrong. This requirement exists so the trial judge gets a real chance to fix a mistake on the spot, while the jury is still available to hear a corrected instruction, rather than finding out about the problem for the first time from an appellate court months or years later. The rule also allows a party to argue that an oral instruction was erroneous, misleading, incomplete, or otherwise improper, not just that a written request was wrongly refused, and it makes clear that even a correct refused instruction will not justify reversal if the same point of law was covered elsewhere in the charge.

Frequently Asked Questions

What do I have to do to preserve an objection to a jury instruction?

You must object before the jury retires to deliberate, state specifically what part of the instruction you are objecting to, and explain your grounds. General or vague objections, or objections made too late, typically will not preserve the issue for appeal.

If the court refuses my requested written instruction, is that automatically reversible on appeal?

No. Even if a refused written instruction was a correct statement of the law, refusing it is not grounds for reversal if the same rule of law was covered elsewhere in the court’s oral charge or in other instructions that were given.

Do the jurors know which side requested which instruction?

No. Instructions the court accepts are read to the jury without identifying which party requested them, so the instructions come across as the court’s own statement of the governing law.

Can the judge comment on the evidence while instructing the jury?

No. Rule 51 states that in charging the jury, the court may not express its opinion of the evidence, which keeps the judge in the role of explaining the law rather than weighing in on which side should win.

Source & verification. The rule text, amendment history, and Committee Comments are reproduced verbatim from the official Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure (Ala. R. Civ. P. 51). Prescribed by the Supreme Court of Alabama (Ala. Const. amend. 328, § 6.11). The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 6, 2026. · Official source
Also known as: jury instruction objectionpreserving error in jury chargerequested jury chargesobjecting to oral chargeAla. R. Civ. P. 51