12 R.I. 73 | R.I. | 1878
The bill of exceptions presents two questions.
First. In a trial to the jury upon a claim for damages for land taken for the defendant corporation under its charter, is the award of damages by the commissioners under the charter admissible as testimony in support of the claim? We think it is not. The charter provides that if any person interested is dissatisfied with the award of the commissioners, he may apply for a jury to hear and finally determine the amount of damages to be assessed, and that the application "shall be heard and tried under the direction of the court, by a jury, in the same mannerthat appeals are heard in said court." The application for a jury trial is therefore in the nature of an appeal, and as in a trial to the jury of an appeal the judgment appealed from is not admissible in evidence to support the claim of the appellant or appellee, so no more is the award or judgment of the commissioners, which is as it were appealed from by the application. It is true the report of the commissioners is a part of the record, and where there is no issue framed, it may be necessary to have recourse to it to ascertain and define precisely the question to be submitted to the jury, but having recourse to it for that purpose does not make it testimony. And the ruling complained of is, that the award was not testimony. We think the ruling was entirely correct.
Second. If upon such an application for a jury trial the jury *75 returns a verdict for a less amount than has been awarded by the commissioners, ought the court to render judgment on the verdict, or on the award of the commissioners? We think the analogies of an appeal are to be followed in this respect also, and that the judgment should be entered on the verdict just as it is in any appealed case in which the trial is by jury.
Exceptions overruled, and the judgment of the court belowaffirmed.