Opinion by
This record presents the question whether the plaintiff in an action in assumpsit can take a voluntary non-suit after the trial judge announces: “I shall have to direct a verdict.”
Plaintiff as guardian of the insured brought an action on a policy of life insurance containing provisions for disability benefits in the event that the insured should become totally and permanently disabled while the policy was in full force and effect. At the trial each side introduced evidence, both oral and written, and at its close both sides submitted points for binding instructions. The trial judge requested oral argument on the points and at the close of these arguments made the statement above quoted. Counsel for plaintiff then said: “I will ask for a voluntary non-suit.” The court replied: “It is too late.” Then he said to the jury: “I direct you to bring in a verdict for the defendant.” The jury thereupon returned a verdict for defendant. The matter was heard before the court in banc and it was held that the motion for a voluntary non-suit was properly overruled.
Section 2 of the Act of March 28, 1814, 6 Smith’s Laws 208, provides that “whenever on the trial of any cause the jury shall be ready to give in their verdict, the plaintiff shall not be called nor shall he then be permitted to suffer a nonsuit.” The Act of April 16, 1903, P. L. 216, provides as follows: “The plaintiff shall not be permitted to suffer a voluntary nonsuit after the jury have agreed upon their verdict, sealed the same and separated, unless such nonsuit shall be specially allowed by the court for cause shown.”
The question before us is whether or not plaintiff’s motion for a nonsuit was too late. Plaintiff contends *75 that it was not, because tbe time had not arrived when “the jury shall be ready to give in their verdict.” Defendant contends.that the motion was too late, because when the trial judge announced his conclusion, the rendering of the verdict by the jury was a mere formal act to carry out the court’s determination of the case and that therefore within the meaning of the statute first above quoted, i. e., the jury “was ready to give in their verdict” at the time the motion for a nonsuit was made.
Blackstone defines a trial to be “the examination of the matter of fact in issue”:
It is well settled that if the determination of an issue on trial rests on a question of law, the court determines it. In the instant case, each opposing litigant contended that he was entitled to binding instructions, i. e., that the issue was one of law. The trial judge held likewise and announced that the issue had been determined in his mind and that he would “direct a verdict [for the defendant]”. Having reached that conclusion, the jury had no further function to perform except to do its formal part in registering the will of the trial judge. Under the law and procedure in Pennsylvania the jurors were then “ready to give in their verdict,” for it is the duty of a jury to carry out promptly the directions of the trial judge when, as here, he acts within the scope of his authority. The issue having resolved itself into one of law and not of fact, the jury’s function ceases to be deliberative and becomes ministerial. It was held in
Pardee v. Orvis,
Should jurors refuse to carry out the instructions of a trial judge in a matter in which the court had jurisdiction, they would be guilty of contempt of court. See
Cahill v. Chicago, etc., Railroad Co.,
It is true that the motion for a voluntary nonsuit was made before the court had formally directed a verdict for the defendant, but the court, having announced that it would “direct a verdict,” the formal instruction followed as a matter of course upon the judicial conclusion already reached. We must hold that since it is a jury’s duty to return a verdict as directed, the jury are in the eyes of the law “ready to give in their verdict” when they are judicially directed to return a certain verdict. We further decide that when the trial judge declares, as here, that “I shall have to direct a verdict,” it would be absurd to hold that in the instant that elapses between the judge’s declaration as to what direction he has decided to give and his actual giving of that direction, a plaintiff may take a voluntary nonsuit. This would reduce the trial of cases, in this feature of them at least, to a mere game of verbal “base running.”
The appellant cites the case of
McLughan v. Bovard,
The question now before us for the first time has arisen in other jurisdictions, and there are many judicial decisions in accord with the one we have reached in this case. In
Bee Bldg. Co. v.
Dalton,
In St. Joseph D. & C. R. R. v. Dryden, 17 Kansas 278, the Supreme Court of Kansas, in an opinion by Justice Brewer (afterwards a member of the Supreme Court of the United States) held: “Where a demurrer to the evidence is sustained, the case is ready to judgment. It has been finally submitted to the court, and the plaintiff has no more right to dismiss then than he has after a verdict is returned. The case is decided, and the plaintiff has no right to avoid that decision by a dismissal.” To permit a party to dismiss under such circumstances is, in substance, to grant him a new trial after he has been fairly defeated and to deprive his adversary of the fruits of a fairly won victory.
In
Dobkin v. Dittmers,
76 N. J. L. 235,
The only Pennsylvania cases, cited by appellant, holding contrary to these cases from other jurisdictions are cases in which there was no peremptory instruction for the defendant either given or intimated. The issues, as in
James et al. v. Bream et
al.,
The court below sitting in banc aptly said: “The [trial] court effectively announced its decision. There was nothing for the jury to do but register the court’s decree and it was in readiness to do so. This was no more than a mere ceremonial act not necessary to a decision of the issue.”
The judgment is affirmed.
