Gillett v. Flanner-Steger Land & Lumber Co.
Gillett v. Flanner-Steger Land & Lumber Co.
Opinion of the Court
The court in submitting tbe cause to the jury, decided that there was room in the evidence to find the facts as they were found. Whether there was such room or not was a question of law. It was for the court to decide that before calling upon the jury to determine, as matters of fact, between conflicting inferences. With the judgment of the court for their guidance, it was most natural for the jury to take, as a verity, that there was room in the evidence for plaintiff to recover. They did so and rendered an honest and reasonable verdict, if the court gave the proper decision as to the law. They, naturally and properly, apprehended there was evidence warranting a finding either way. Whether the court decided at last, that there was no reasonable basis for the jury’s verdict, in any reasonable view of the evidence, does not clearly appear.
On the whole, the decision of the trial judge does not possess the persuasiveness ordinarily to be accorded to a consistent and positive determination that the evidence does not, in any reasonable view, support the jury’s determination. Therefore, it seems that there is little, if anything, in the court’s decision below to impeach the verdict. So we incline to the view that there was a case for the jury, as the trial court, so far as they could have understood the matter, deliberately decided, and that judgment should have been rendered accordingly.
Whether the verdict was excessive or not, because of the course the case took, was'not passed upon. Deceased was a common workingman. He was capable of earning about $400 per year. Tie was fifty-nine years of age. The recovery could not, properly, go beyond the reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit from his life which the wife was deprived of by his untimely taking away. A recovery, in such
The statute provides that the court, for the purpose of preventing a miscarriage of justice, may control the situation regardless of inadvertences or mistakes or mis judgments of the court or counsel, and may, regardless of whether proper motions, objections, or exceptions were taken or not, in case of a reversal, direct the proper judgment, or remand the cause for a new trial as shall be deemed necessary to accomplish the ends of justice. In view of that, it is considered that we ought, instead of remanding the case for judgment on the verdict as rendered, send it back with permission to the plaintiff to elect, within twenty days after the filing of the remittir
By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and tbe cause remanded with directions as indicated in tbe opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Gillett, Administrator v. Flanner-Steger Land & Lumber Company
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published