Jeansch v. Lewis
Jeansch v. Lewis
Opinion of the Court
This is am action for damages alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendants. The action was tried before a jury, and a verdict and judgment rendered for plaintiff. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled. From the judgment and order overruling the motion for a new trial, defendants appeal to this court. Three questions are presented by the assignment of errors, namely: (1) Does the verdict, in the form it was rendered by the jury, sustain the judgment? (2) did the circuit court err in denying the motion for a new trial without hearing the motion upon the merits? and (3) was the evidence sufficient to justify the verdict?
1. The verdict rendered by the jury is as follows: “We,
2. It appears from the record that the case was tried before the Honorable James Spencer, one of the judges of the territorial court, and that the motion for a new trial was made and argued before him while a member of that court, but that no formal order was signed by him or record made in his court showing that he had ever decided the motion. When the present state circuit judge came upon the bench, the motion was renewed before him. After several postponements, the matter came on for hearing June 17, 1890, by stipulation. At this hearing the attorney for the plaintiff read to the court certain letters from ex-Judge Spencer and the former clerk of his court, and affidavits tending to prove that Judge Spencer had before his retirement from the bench passed upon the motion, and denied it. Thereupon the circuit court made an order overruling the motion for a new trial, stating in said order that
3. This brings us to the last question presented. There are three essential elements constituting plaintiff’s cause of action necessary for him to establish by legal evidence to entitle him to recover, namely:
(1) The injury complained of; (2) the negligence of de•fendants; and (3) the damages resulting therefrom. All these
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) I cannot agree with my brothers in the expression of the opinion as above announed, except as to the first question presented. In this I fully concur. In my opinion the court below erred in denying the motion for a new trial without hearing it upon its merits. The record in the case shows the cause was tried on the 18th day of June, 1889, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff, but no judgment entered. July 1st, the defendant served a notice of intion to move for a new trial, and on the 10th day of August a stay of proceedings was obtained. On the 20th of September, 1889, the parties stipulated to argue the motion for a new trial upon the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, that the verdict was contrary to law, irregularity in the proceedings on the part of plaintiff, and errors of law occurring at the trial. Neither the original record nor the abstract shows that the motion for a new trial was ever argued, entertained, or determined by the court that tried the cause. On the 30th of November the plaintiff served a statement of costs, and a notice of taxation of same, to»be had on the 3d of December. On that day defendant appeared before the clerk, and objected to the taxation of costs for the reason that a motion for a new trial had not been heard or determined by the courti The taxation of costs was then continued by the clerk until the 13th of December, and, upon due consideration by him o.f the objections as raised by the defendant, they were sustained; but subseqently, and for what reason the record does not disclose, the clerk did, in the absence of and without notice to the defendants, tax the costs, and enter judgment
From the above detailed statement of the proceedings it appears:
Second. The record shows that no order was ever made overruling the motion for a new trial, nor was there anything on file showing any action of the court in relation to the motion. Whether it was ever heard or argued or submitted to
Reference
- Cited By
- 41 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Whore an action is being prosecuted ag'ainst two defendants as copartners, and no question is raised as to the liability of one independently of the other, and where it was stspulatod at the commencement of the trial, after dismissing as to a third defendant, .“that the action proceed” against the other two “as copartners under the firm name of Lewis Bros.,” held, that a verdict in favor of plaintiff “and against the defendant,” etc., was properly construed by the court as a verdict ag'ainst the two, or the firm, and a judgment entered against both defendants upon it was valid, and the ommission of the letter “s” in defendant was a mere clerical error. 2. Verdicts are to receive a reasonable construction, and as such will carry out the intention of the jury; and where, as in this case, the intention of the jury was clear to the court, it was its duty to disregard a merely ' clerical error, which it would at once have corrected had its attention been called to it. 3. Where a motion for a now trial was argued and submitted to the judge of the territorial court who tried the cause, but no order or record of any decision was made, and the motion was brought up before a state circut judge who succeeded him, held, the circuit judge properly received evidence showing such territorial judge had actually overruled the motion. Bennett, J., dissenting. 4. Held, further, that a motion once heard and decided by a court cannot be renewed in the same court upon the same facts without leave of court, and that this rule applies as well to cases where there has been a change of judges as where the motion is made before the same judge. Bennett, J., dissenting'. 5. Held, further, that the circuit judge, being satisfied from the evidence introduced before him without objection that the territorial judge who tried the case had decided the motion for a new trial-, and overruled it, though no order was signed or record made of it, very properly-refused to hear it again. B-ENNETT, J., dissenting'. 6. Where, in a case tried before a jury, the evidence is conflicting, this court will not weigh the evidence, or go further than to determine therefrom whether or not the party has given sufficient legal evidence to sustain his verdict without regard to the evidence given on the part of the other party, except so far as such evidence tends to sustain his case. 7. Held, in this case, that there is evidence sufficient to sustain the verdict, and that the same should not be disturbed. Bennett, J., dissenting. (Syllabus by the court.