113 Tenn. 488 | Tenn. | 1904
delivered tbe opinion oí tbe Court.
These are two separate cases beard together in tbe court below by consent, and involving damages for personal injuries caused by a collision between tbe cars of tbe Rapid Transit Company and tbe Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company. Tbe plaintiffs are both minors, Faustina at tbe time of tbe injury being about 13 years of age, and Edista being about nine years old. Tbe suit was brought for tbe benefit of tbe minors by their father as next friend against tbe Alabama Great Southern' Railroad Company, tbe Rapid Transit Company, and tbe Belt Line Company. There was a verdict in favor of tbe latter two, but against tbe Alabama Great ■Southern Railroad Company, in favor of Faustina for $2,000, and in favor of Edista for $800, and tbe railroad has appealed and assigned as tbe only error that tbe verdict in each case is so excessive as to evince passion, prejudice, or caprice on tbe part of tbe jury. Counsel for tbe railroad company admitted that bis company was liable for some damages, and expressed bis willingness to pay what was reasonable, and that tbe jury might fix tbe amount.
There was no claim made in tbe case for vindictive, punitive, or exemplary damages. Tbe court below ruled that only compensatory damages could be received under tbe agreement of tbe parties, and to this there was no exception by plaintiff.
No exception was made to this charge in the court below, nor is any made in this court.
Counsel for the plaintiff, in his brief, states that the proof in the court below was confined to the mere question of compensatory damages, and insists that the amount found is only compensatory, and not subject to the assignment that it is so excessive as to evince passion, prejudice, or caprice on the part of the jury.
We have before us, therefore, cases of verdicts upon facts which, it is conceded, make a case of liability in which the element of exemplary or punitive damages is not involved, but only what is compensatory for personal injuries. The liability of the defendant being conceded, the only question is whether the amounts found by the jury for the two girls are so excessive as to evince passion, prejudice, and caprice on the part of the jury; and in our opinion they are so excessive as to fall within the rule;„ and should be abated — that of plaintiff Faus-tina from $2,000 to $1,250, and that of Edista from
This court therefore suggests to plaintiffs’ counsel that the recoveries be reduced to these amounts; and, in the event they - consent thereto, judgments will be so entered, and ten days is granted to them, and each of them, respectively, to accept or reject this suggestion. In the event either of said plaintiffs, by their attorneys, shall not accept this suggestion of the court, and agree thereto, the judgment of the lower court will be reversed as to such one, and a new trial awarded as to her, and the appellee not agreeing will pay costs of her appeal.
Inasmuch as this is to some degree a new practice in Tennessee, the court deems it proper to state the reasons for adopting it and the law applicable to it.
It has heretofore been held that, when a verdict of a jury is special and a certain part thereof is not lawfully recoverable, this court will allow the verdict to stand if a remittitur is entered as to the objectionable part. Memphis v. Kimbrough, 12 Heisk., 133.
So, when there is apparent an error of calculation in an action of debt, this court will not reverse and remand, hut will remit the erroneous part. McKinley v. Beasley, 5 Sneed, 170. See, also, Railroad v. Wallace, 91 Tenn., 35, 17 S. W., 882.
When the judgment in the court below is for an, amount greater than that laid in the suit and declaration, this court will reverse unless the appellee remit
So when a yerdict is based upon seyéral items, and is divisible, this court may remit so as to reduce the total amount by such items as have been improperly allowed by the jury. Railroad v. Wallace, 91 Tenn., 35, 17 S. W., 882.
This is perhaps the lull extent to which this court has heretofore gone in causing or suggesting remittiturs; and the usual practice in damage suits for personal injuries, when there is a gross yerdict or judgment to cover all damages, has been, in case the verdict is so excessive as to evince passion, prejudice, or caprice on the part of the jury, to set aside the judgment and verdict and award a new trial.
The consequence has been to prolong litigation, to swell bills of cost, to delay final adjudication, and, in a large number of instances, to have such excessive judgments repeated over and over, upon the new trial.
It is believed that this is a result which may be remedied by adopting the practice herein suggested, and which already prevails in the majority of the States of the Union. This practice will conform to that of the court below, and we can see no good reason why it should not prevail.
The rule in the lower court is that the trial judge may suggest a remittitur to-' the plaintiff, and, if he assents thereto, he may avoid a setting aside of the verdict and a new trial. Branch v. Bass, 5 Sneed, 366.
The general rule is stated as follows:
The trial judge may, as a condition of denying the motion for a new trial, made by the defendant in an action of debt, require a remittitur of part of the verdict which he deems excessive, but it is optional with the plaintiff to comply with such condition or suffer a new trial. Young v. Cowden, 98 Tenn., 588, 590, 40 S. W., 1088, citing Branch v. Bass, 5 Sneed, 366; Railroad v. Jones, 9 Heisk., 27; Massadillo v. Railroad Company, 89 Tenn., 661, 15 S. W., 445; Railroad v. Wallace, 91 Tenn., 35, 17 S. W., 882; Railroad v. Garrett, 8 Lea, 450, 41 Am. Rep., 640; Railroad v. Foster, 10 Lea, 366, approved in Tel. Co. v. Frith, 105 Tenn., 174, 58 S. W., 118.
In Railroad Company v. Garrett, 8 Lea, 438, 41 Am. Rep., 640, it was held to be an error, but not reversible under the facts of that case, to require a remittitur if the defendant would abide by the judgment and not appeal, and when the defendant would not agree the judgment was allowed to stand.
The defendant in case of remittitur cannot be required to abandon or waive his right of appeal as a condition to acceptance by plaintiff. Railroad v. Foster, 10 Lea,
These cases show the extent to which this court has gone in suggesting remittiturs in this court and approving remittiturs in the court below.
As before stated, the practice in this court has heretofore been, in cases of excessive judgments for damages for personal injuries, to set them aside and remand for a new trial, if the verdict is so excessive as to evince passion, prejudice, or caprice. ' When the excess does not go to this extent, the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court below is not disturbed by this court. Tenn. Coal & Ry. Co. v. Roddy, 85 Tenn., 400, 5 S. W., 286.
The rule prevailing in a large number of States of the Union is that a remittitur may be required as well in this court as in the trial court. 18 Enc. Pleadings and Practice, p. 137, and authorities there quoted.
It is also laid down in 18 Enc. Pleadings and Practice, 125, that the great weight of authority is that a court may permit or require the entry of a remittitur in actions for unliquidated damages for torts. See cases cited.
Again it is said: “It is a very common practice for an appellate court, when it deems the damages excessive, and this is the only error, to require a remittitur of the amount considered excessive as a condition to the af-firmance of the judgment.”
In support of this a large number of cases are cited from the following States:
In many of these States the rule has been adopted in later cases over a contrary holding in earlier cases. Notably is this case in Missouri, as is shown by the case of Burdict v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co., 123 Mo., 221, 27 S. W., 453, 26 L. R. A., 384, 45 Am. St. Rep., 528.
This is a well-considered case and extensively annotated, and the different holdings in the several courts are distinguished and illustrated. In some States, as in Louisiana, it is held that the court has power to cut the verdict without the assent of the parties; but the great weight of authority is that it cannot be done over the protest of the successful plaintiff. See our own cases heretofore cited, especially Massadillo v. Railroad Company, 89 Tenn., 661, 15 S. W., 445.
The doctrine of remittitur applies to damages in torts as well as to damages for breach of contract. The judge may set aside the verdict in such cases-m bolo. It follows that he may determine what would be a reasonable amount. Such is not a usurpation by the court of the province of the jury. The facts have been passed on by a jury, and the right to recover has been determined by the jury, and not by the court. The judge expresses his opinion as to the reasonableness of the amount, the
It may be said that this practice of requiring a remit-titur is the exercise of original jurisdiction by this court and in the same connection it may be said that, if this court has the right to reduce the judgment of the court below it has the right to increase it. Neither of-these objections are well grounded. This court cannot,, and does not render any judgment as an exercise of original jurisdiction when it reduces the verdict and judgment of the court below. It merely reviews and corrects the judgment rendered to the extent of the excess; and, as to this excess, it may very well be said there is no evidence to sustain it. But it cannot give judgment for an amount in excess of what the jury has found, which the jury has not found, for that would be the exercise of original jurisdiction.
In thé cases of Hutchins v. St. Paul, M. & M. Co., 44 Minn., 5, 46 N. W., 79, it is said, in- substance; that,
In a number of cases it has been held that when thé damages are so excessive as to evince passion, prejudice, or caprice, the error cannot be corrected by remittitur, because such passion, prejudice, and caprice will be presumed to have permeated the entire verdict, and to have influenced or caused the finding of the question of any liability on the facts.
See cases cited in 18 Enc. Plead. and Prac., 144.
We cannot admit the soundness of the view of these cases under our practice. If a jury, through passion, -prejudice, and caprice has given a judgment, whether excessive or not, when the facts do not warrant any judgment, it is the practice of this court to set aside the verdict, because there is no evidence to support it.
But when the court can see that there is liability, and especially when that liability is conceded for some amount, as in the present case, and the only error is the reason to set aside the verdict in toto, if justice and right can be reached by reducing the damages. There may be cases where a verdict for any amount whatever would evince passion, prejudice, or caprice, and these cases can readily be reached under the rule of this court to reverse when there is no evidence to support the verdict. The courts are not uniform in the mode of sub
We are of the opinion, therefore, that it is good law, sound policy, and no invasion of the right-s of parties or the province of the jury, and no exercise of original jurisdiction, to adopt the practice of requiring remittiturs in this court at the option of the appellee, to the end that justice may be reached and an end put to litigation.