Warner v. Snook
Warner v. Snook
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In 1914, under the provision of the statute (Laws of 1913, ch. 295) which has since been repealed (Laws of 1915, ch. 322, § 14), Glenn A. Warner settled on a tract of land which he claimed to be open to settlement as school land on account of having formerly been an island in the bed of the Arkansas river. E. O. Snook and George Reigl protested the claim on the ground that the tract was an accretion to their riparian land. A trial was had; in which a jury returned a general verdict in favor of the protestants or defendants and made a number of special findings. The court granted a new trial, and the defendants appeal.
“I think that instruction No. 6 might have misled the jury in finding that that island did n’t exist at a certain time. I think it is pure speculation, but would that be material? ... I feel that probably the jury was misled by that sixth instruction that was given without any evidence to base it on and I think a new trial ought to be granted in this case. It will be granted.”
We do not interpret the record as showing that the new trial was granted solely because of error supposed to have been committed in the giving of the instruction referred to. It seems rather to indicate that the judge could not approve the verdict and findings of fact made by the jury, and by way of explanation as to how they might have,.formed such mistaken beliefs, or a part of them, suggested that they were probably misled by an instruction which was given without a sufficient basis in the evidence. Even if upon examination of the evidence we should conclude that it justified, giving ,the instruction, we could not order judgment on a verdict which has not received the approval of the trial court. (K. C. W. & N. W. Rld. Co. v. Ryan, 49 Kan. 1, 30 Pac. 108.) There .is an intimation in the language quoted, that the court did not regard the effect of the instruction as vital. In this situation, it appearing that the court set aside the verdict because he felt that it was not in accordance with the facts, we can only affirm the order granting a new trial.
2. The defendants argue, with considerable plausibility, that judgment in their favor should be ordered upon the special findings which the court did not set aside, because these findings were in themselves fatal to a,-recovery by the plaintiffs. One of them was to the effect that no part of the land in dispute originated as an island. That finding, if regarded as es
The decision is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Glenn A. Warner v. E. O. Snook and George Reigl
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. 1. School Land — Islands—Findings of Jury■ — New Trial Granted — No Error. In an appeal from an order granting a new trial the appellant contends that the ruling was based solely on the ground that error was committed in giving a particular instruction. It is held that . upon the whole record it appears that the new trial was ordered because the trial judge disagreed with the jury in their view of the facts, and therefore the decision is not reviewable. 2. Same. The fact that the trial cotirt in granting a new trial specifically and formally sets aside, as without any support in the evidence, only a part of the special findings which are attacked, and states that there was some evidence to support the others, does not necessarily show that such approval was given to the latter findings as to justify this court in ordering judgment on them, even if they would be in themselves, if regarded as establishing the facts to which they relate, conclusive of the rights of the parties.