56 So. 32 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
“After the evidence closed,” as recited by the bill of exceptions in this case, “each par(ty presented to the court a written request for the affirmative charge. The court gave such affirmative charge in favor of the defendant, and refused it to the plaintiff, Whereupon defendant’s attorney read to the jury the general change in favor of the defendant, which the court had given at the defendant’s request, and thereupon immediately after said charge had been so given and read to the jury, the plaintiff asked permission of
The action of the court in refusing to allow plaintiff to take a nonsuit under the circumstances as above set out is here assigned as erroj;. “It is well settled that while a suit in its ordinary form is pending in a court of law, the plaintiff has, subject to certain exceptions, the absolute right, before or after issue joined and at •any time before verdict rendered, to dismiss his suit or take a voluntary nonsuit. (Italics supplied.)—Davis v. Foshee, 34 Ala. 108; Jennings v. Pearce, 99 Ala. 305 (13 South. 605); 6 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 833, 843; 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (1st Ed.) 184; Hawes on Parties to Actions, § 2;” Baldwin v. Roman, 132 Ala. 323, 31 South. 596.
We think it would make no difference that the general charge had been requested by both parties. The verdict had not in fact been rendered, and the court’s ■direction to the jury to render a verdict, if they believed the evidence, was not equivalent to a rendition of the verdict. The jury being the sole triers of the facts, it was exclusively in their province to pass on the evidence, and say whether, or not they believed it, and until they did this no ver,dict can be said to have been rendered. The plaintiff should have been allowed to take a nonsuit at the time he offered so to do; the jury had not retired nor had a verdict been rendered, and no rights of the defendant had been set up by pleas of set-off or other cross-action that could have been prejudiced by the entry of such a judgment.
The appellant’s right to suffer a nonsuit having been improperly denied by the trial court, the final judgment on the minutes entered in the court below is set aside,, and a judgment of nonsuit here entered.
Reversed and rendered.