This appeal arises out of an automobile collision which involved vehicles driven by plaintiff Karen Bishop and defendant Donald Cummines. Plaintiffs lawsuit is for injuries to her neck and back. The appeal concerns the validity of the trial court’s order of addi-tur and assessment of costs against the defendant.
On February 13, 1991, defendant filed an Offer of Judgment in the amount of $5,500.00. Plaintiff did not accept the offer and the case went to trial on July 20, 1992. The jury found in favor of the plaintiff and awarded damages in the amount of $429.50.
Plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial and a motion for additur. She argued that she incurred medical expenses in the amount of $4,264.50, which were uncontested. Both the plaintiffs and the defendant’s doctors testified that these medical expenses were reasonable and necessary.
A hearing was held on plaintiffs motions. The court denied the motion for new trial but granted the motion for additur, increased the jury award $8,835.00 and entered judgment for $4,264.50, which was the exact amount of plaintiffs proven medical expenses. The courts explanation for the additur was that the medical expenses were uneontested. The court also assessed all costs against defendant and defendant appeals.
A detailed statement of the facts of the accident is not material to the disposition of this appeal. The parties were involved in an automobile accident and the plaintiff filed suit alleging numerous injuries to her lower back and neck. She was seen by Dr. Pickett *923 who had been attending her for her pregnancy. She received physical therapy and was prescribed a TENS unit. Dr. Pickett testified to the reasonableness and necessity of plaintiffs medical expenses of $4,264.50.
The plaintiff was examined by the defendant’s doctor, Victoria Cook, who testified to “a reasonable medical certainty” that the treatment provided by Dr. Pickett through May 1990 for injuries as a result of the accident, as well as the physical therapy, TENS treatment unit, x-rays, eat scans and expenses of a second medical opinion by an orthopedic surgeon, were all reasonable and necessary.
The defendant argues that both doctors testified without the benefit of other evidence that may have changed their respective opinions. He claims the doctors were unaware of the mechanics of the accident including the speed of the respective vehicles (which he described as slow and stopped), the degree or angle of impact, and plaintiff’s back pain experienced during a previous pregnancy. He argues that all of these factors may have changed their opinions. The defendant’s argument on appeal does not challenge the constitutionality of additur or the procedure used to invoke it. Rather, he argues that the trial court erred because additur should only be granted when the verdict “shocks the conscience” or is the result of an “honest mistake.”
Additur is defined as the practice of the courts in conditioning a denial of a new trial on consent by the defendant to an increase in the amount of the judgment. 1A C.J.S. Ad-ditur (1985). (Whether consent of the defendant is necessary is subject to some dispute under the case law of the various jurisdictions.) The “additur” doctrine is a corollary to that of “remittitur,” the former to increase an inadequate verdict, and the latter to decease an excessive verdict.
United States v. 93.970 Acres of Land,
The determination of damages is principally the jury’s decision.
Leasure v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Additur is statutorily authorized in Missouri by § 537.068, RSMo Supp.1991, although the statute does not use the term “additur.” 1
A court may enter a remittitur order if after reviewing the evidence in support of the jurys verdict, the court finds that the jurys verdict is excessive because the amount of the verdict exceeds fair and reasonable compensation for plaintiffs injuries and damages. A court may increase the size of a jurys award if the court finds that the jurys verdict is inadequate because the amount of the verdict is less than fair and reasonable compensation for plaintiffs injuries and damages.
The statute was adopted as part of the “Tort Reform Act,” and gives the court discretion *924 to increase the jury’s verdict if the court finds the verdict is less than fair and reasonable compensation for the injured party’s damages.
The court had before it plaintiffs complaint of the inadequate verdict in her motion for new trial, which specifically made reference to the medical bills, and a separate motion for additur, filed the same day, requesting medical expenses in the amount of $4,264.50 and lost wages. The court denied the motion for new trial but sustained the motion for additur (as to medical expenses only) and entered judgment for the total amount of the medical bills. It appears from the record before us that the defendant was not offered the option of accepting the addi-tur but he makes no objection on appeal in that regard. 2
The purposes of the doctrine of remit-titur have historically been to bring jury verdicts in line with prevailing awards (considering matters such as changing economic factors),
Ricketts,
The authority of Missouri trial courts to enter remittitur was established many years ago. See
Burdict v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co.,
Although there are Missouri cases that have increased the jury’s verdict which make reference to the doctrine of additur, there are other cases that clearly state that the doctrine of additur has never been formally adopted in Missouri (at least until the passage of § 538.056.) It was held early in Missouri’s case history that a court could not require a successful defendant to consent to judgment against himself for part of his adversary’s claim as a condition of the overruling of a motion for a new trial.
Kortjohn v. Altenbernd,
In
Allison v. Mountjoy,
The
Allison
court relied on the 1936 Supreme Court case of
Home Trust Co. v. Josephson,
Particularly persuasive is the case of
Caen v. Feld,
*926 It appears that the doctrine of additur existed in Missouri, but concerned only the reduction of liquidated damages and was governed by different considerations.
In
Knox,
In
Vincent v. Johnson,
In this case we are presented with proven losses of medical expenses, and conceding that the jury can find against the party having the burden of proof in face of her own uncontroverted evidence, see
Stahlheber,
In the second point the defendant charges that the trial court erroneously assessed costs against him because he had made an Offer of Judgment in the amount of $5,500.00 pursuant to Rule 77.04 and it was not accepted. The rule provides that all costs incurred after the offer is made shall be assessed against the party failing to obtain a judgment more favorable than that offered. Rule 77.04. Only the costs incurred before the date of the offer, February 13,1991, shall be assessed against the defendant.
The judgment of the trial court ordering additur is affirmed. The judgment assessing costs against the defendant is reversed and the matter remanded for reassessment of costs in accordance with this opinion.
All concur.
Notes
. But see § 510.263.6, RSMo Supp.1991, which does identify the doctrine of additur by name, and makes it applicable, along with remittitur, to punitive damages.
.Remittitur and additur are premised on the idea that the party against whom the new trial will be granted be given the option of agreeing to the additur or remittitur.
Cazzell v. Schofield,
. The Final Report of the Missouri Task Force on Liability Insurance, January 6, 1987, to the Missouri General Assembly recommends that it adopt "the doctrines of remittitur and additur, thereby allowing a court either to decrease or increase the size of a jurys award.” The Task Forces recommendations are helpful in understanding the changes made by the General Assembly. In the Task Forces discussion of these doctrines, it makes no distinction between the doctrines and identifies both as based “on the concept of equitable compensation,” and states that the use of the doctrines permits the courts to modify judgments, “thereby avoiding the need to retry cases.” Final Report at 25.
. This case dealt with the appellate court's use of the doctrine of remittitur. The case makes reference to previous Missouri cases in which the appellate courts upheld the trial courts’ use of the doctrine of remittitur which places this procedure further into our legal history than 1894.
. The funeral expense was an "admitted amount of $956.30" and the court noted there was no issue as to reasonableness. Id. at 214.
