113 Ga. 453 | Ga. | 1901
A number of grounds are set out in the motion for a new trial. In addition to those that the verdict is contrary to law and without evidence to support it, several assignments of error are made to the rulings of the judge in admitting evidence, and to several portions of. his charge to the jury. These we have carefully considered, and in our judgment no error of law was commit
In the second volume of Graham & Waterman on New Trials, 3 9, the author says: “ That the exercise of this power is sometimes absolutely necessary for the purposes of justice it needs but little argument to demonstrate. If the verdict of a jury be, in all cases, conclusive, there is no remedy for a fraudulent and wilful disregard of the evidence; and. a trial by jury, instead of being the safest and most expeditious mode of determining questions of fact, would soon lose that place in the public confidence to which it is now so justly entitled.” In the same volume on page 41 the author further says: “ In the hurry of a trial the ablest judge may mistake the law, and misdirect the jury. . . The jury are to give their opinion instanter, that is, before they separate, eat or drink; and under these circumstances the most intelligent and the best intentioned men may bring in a verdict which they themselves, upon cool deliberation, would wish to reverse. Granting a new trial, under proper regulations, cures all those inconveniences, and at the same time preserves entire and renders perfect that most excellent method of decision which is the glory of the English law.” Lord Mansfield in the case of Bright v. Eynon, 1 Burrow, 390, among other things said: “ Trials by jury in civil causes could not subsist now, without a power somewhere to grant new trials. . . Most general verdicts include legal consequences as well as propositions of fact. In drawing these consequences, the jury may mistake, and infer directly contrary to law. . . If unjust verdicts, obtained under these and a thousand like circumstances, were to be
In the case of Taylor v. Sutton, 15 Ga. 103, which was a bill in equity filed to obtain relief against a judgment at law, Judge Lumpkin, in delivering the opinion, said: “ The first instance to be met with in any book of legal authority, of a new trial, with reference to the merits of the case on the evidence, is in the year 1665. . . For many years afterwards, new trials were grudgingly granted at common law; and for that very reason, courts of equity were liberal in granting relief against common-law judgments, and the court of chancery was induced to take to itself the decision of legal questions, in many cases, which now appear to have been beyond the legitimate bounds of its jurisdiction — for it is now universally admitted that trials by jury, in civil cases, could now [not] subsist without a power, residing somewhere, to grant new trials. Misconduct, mistake, surprise, and prejudice, and the other grounds of failure,
We know of no better rule for the guidance of a trial judge in passing on a motion for anew trial than-that which may be deduced
It must not be understood that in our discussion of the power and right of a trial judge to grant a new trial it is our purpose in any way to criticise the action of our brother of the trial bench who presided in the case brought before us for review. On the contrary, having affirmed all of the rulings of law made by him in the case, we are only led to review the terms of his order overruling the motion for a new trial because of the conviction that he adopted the erroneous view which, we are led to believe, some of the judges of other trial courts in this State have entertained: that is, that if there was any evidence, however slight, to support the verdict, a new trial should not be granted. Such is not and never has been the rule where the common law prevails, and it would be in direct contravention of our statutes on the subject. We infer that the trial judge entertained this view from the expression, contained in his order, that he “ reluctantly ” overruled the motion; and so interpreting it, we are constrained to think that the verdict which was rendered did not meet his approval, although he overruled the motion. Some members of this court reach this conclusion because the evidence to support the verdict was so exceedingly weak that its sufficiency to warrant the jury’s finding is to be gravely