Hamilton v. Langley
Hamilton v. Langley
Opinion of the Court
Curia, per
Upon the motion for a nonsuit, this Court concurs in opinion with Mr. Justice Earle, and principally for the rea
The Court of General Sessions is a Court of general jurisdiction,
As to the first and second grounds of a new trial, the Judge’s report explains away the first, and on the second we concur with him. Upon the third ground, I would remark that a question of damages is particularly for the jury, and it must be a manifest case of error upon which we would undertake to interfere. The opinion of the presiding Judge, that the damages found were too small, cannot help the plaintiff; for notwithstanding we are disposed to give effect to his opinion in all cases where it can be done, yet this is one of those cases in which he had not the means of saying that the verdict was against evidence. For the damages are more discretionary than otherwise with the jury.
The motions are dismissed.
2 McMul., 116. An.
) See 2 McM., 118. An.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.