This action was brought by Charles Hockensmith against Wilburn Anderson to recover $2,193.56 for breach of contract in the оperation of the defendant’s farm and for $300 for services rendered the defendant and expenses incurred in taking some slot machines to Cuba for him. The de *490 fendant traversed material allegations of the cоmplaint, including the employment to take the devices to Cuba, and set up a counter-claim for $1,817.75, less credits of $1,231.56 which he admitted owing the plaintiff.
The case was submitted to a jury by three instructions. Instruction No. 1 covered the plaintiff’s claim for the services and expenses stated. No. 2 related to the plaintiff’s right to recоver under the farming contract, not to exceed $3,331.56, less $478 which he conceded he owed the defendаnt. No. 3 submitted the defendant’s counter-claim with the statement that if the jury should find for the defendant, the award should not be in excess of $1,416.08 “to be credited or deducted from your finding under instruction No. 2, if any.”
Two verdicts were written on the bаck of the-instructions. One was, “We eleven members of the jury find for the defendant” and signed by those jurors. Another verdict reads, “Unanimously found for defendant and award $1,416.08 to plaintiff, F. E. .Vanslyke, foreman.” The record does not show thаt any objection' was made to the verdict or that either party asked before the discharge of the jury that it be required to correct its verdict. The court entered a judgment for the plaintiff, Hoclcensmith, for $1,416.08.
The appellant, Anderson, died after filing his motion for an appeal, and the motion has been revived by Evеlyn B. Anderson, executrix of his will.
A reversal of the judgment is sought upon the ground that it is not in accord with the verdicts and the verdicts do not conform to the instructions. It is basicly argued that the court should have granted the defendant a new trial because the verdicts are so inconsistent and ambiguous as to be meaningless.
The appellee’s position is that the verdicts definitely express the intention of the jury to award him, as plaintiff, $1,416.08 in damages. It is submitted thаt the record fully justified such a finding and that it was not incumbent upon the jury to state how or by what method of calculаtion it arrived at its verdict. We so held in Scobee v. Donahue,
Where a verdict is ambiguous, irregular or defective in form or in substance, a trial court has the power, indeed, the duty when its attention is called to the verdict, to require the jury to reconsider and change its verdict whether or not the court is requested to do so. Walter v. Louisvillе Railway Co.,
Hоwever, where a verdict is so uncertain, ambiguous, contradictory, or illogical that it cannot be clеarly ascertained
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who it is for or against or what facts were found and the court cannot reasonаbly construe the language so as to give effect to what the jury unmistakably found as a basis of a judgment thereon, the vice in the verdict is more than formal. Such a condition is of the substance and affects the merits of thе case. Where a verdict is of that character, the party against whom the judgment goes does not waive the defect by failing to ask that the jury clarify the verdict. He may raise the question on a motion for a new trial and the court should grant it. Wall v. Van Meter,
Here we have an erratic verdict. The jury found for both the defendant and the plaintiff on the same issues. The verdict is meaningless because of the contradiction in finding for thе defendant twice and then in proceeding to award damages to the plaintiff. So obscure was the intеntion of the jury that the court must have resorted to speculation in order to enter a judgment on the verdict. More than that, it will be observed that instruction No. 2 authorized a verdict for the plaintiff of a maximum of $3,331.56, less $478; and instruction No. 3 authorized a verdict for the defendant of a maximum of $1,416.08, less any finding for the plaintiff under instruction No. 2. If the word “defendant” was inadvertently used instead of “plaintiff,” still, the jury was bound to have credited the $1,416.08 by at least $478, which was directed to be done in instruction No. 2. This but confounds confusion. The verdict does not accord with the instructions. A jury is bоund to accept and apply the law as it is contained in the instructions. If it does not, the verdict should be set aside as contrary to law. Daniels v. Central Truckaway System, Ky.,
We are of opinion that the trial court shоuld have sustained the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
The motion for an appeal is sustained and the judgment is reversed.
