The opinion of the court was delivered by
: This was an action brought by Samuel K. Stoop, as administrator of thev estate of George
It is contended by the company that the action of the court in setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial was an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court. The testimony of the plaintiff below was to the effect that the company negligently permitted large quantities of coal-dust impregnated with sulphur to accumulate in the mine, and that such coal-dust was combustible and explosive, and, coming in
In view of the fact that the testimony was so conflicting and contradictory there is little left for our determination.
‘' The granting of a new trial is so much in the discretion of the trial court that the supreme court will not reverse the order of the trial court granting a new trial unless error is clearly established with respect to some pure, simple and unmixed question of law.” ( Sanders v. Wakefield, 41 Kan. 11; City of Sedan v. Church, 29 id. 190.)
It is conceded that there is a conflict in the testimony, but it is urged that this conflict was settled by the jury, who are the exclusive judges of the facts, and that it was clearly an abuse of discretion in the trial court to set aside the verdict. A trial court will be reluctant to set aside a verdict where a doubtful question of fact exists, simply because its judgment inclines the other way; but the mere fact that there is a conflict in the testimony does not relieve the court from examining the sufficiency of the evidence, nor make the verdict of the jury conclusive.
“While-the case is before the jury for their consideration, the jury are the exclusive judges of all questions of fact; but when the matter comes before the court upon a motion for a new trial, it then becomes the duty of the trial judge to determine whether the verdict is erroneous.” (K. C. W. & N. W. Rld. Co. v. Ryan, 49 Kan. 1.)
“It has been the unvarying decision of this court to permit no verdict to stand unless both the jury and the court trying the cause could, within the rules prescribed, approve the same.”
Whenever a trial court determines that the verdict is clearly against the weight or preponderance of the evidence it should not hesitate to set it aside and grant a new trial, and, in arriving at this determination, the judge of the trial court must be controlled by his own-judgment, and not by that of the jury. ( Williams v. Townsend, 15 Kan. 563 ; U. P. Rly. Co. v. Diehl, 33 id. 422.) In K. P. Rly. Co. v. Kunkel, 17 Kan. 172, it was held that the judge had the same opportunities as the jury for forming a just estimate of the credence to be placed on the various witnesses; and, if it appears that the jury have found against the weight of the evidence, it is the imperative duty of the judge to set the verdict aside. If the evidence is nearly balanced, so that different minds might fairly come to different conclusions, the finding of the jury should stand, as against any mere doubts of the judge concerning its correctness ; but when his judgment tells him that the jury from some cause have found against the fair preponderance of the evidence, no duty is more imperative than that of setting aside the verdict and remanding the case to another jury. And so, in City of Sedan v. Church, supra, it was said that
“New trials ought to be granted whenever, in the opinion of the trial court, the party asking for the new trial has not in all probability had a reasonably fair trial, and has not in all probability obtained or received substantial justice.”
The trial judge, under whose eye and within whose hearing the evidence was presented, did not approve