122 Minn. 343 | Minn. | 1913
This action was brought hy the plaintiff against the defendants to recover damages for wrongfully and maliciously procuring a school district to break its contract with him. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $5,750. The defendants made an alternative motion for judgment or for a new trial. The court denied the motion for judgment, but granted the motion for a new trial, unless the plaintiff remitted all of the verdict in excess of $2,500. Tie remitted. The defendants appeal from the order made on the alternative motion.
Plaintiff claims that the defendants, working in concert, and actuated by malice, induced the school board to break his contract.
The evidence is of considerable length. We do not attempt to summarize it. It is sufficient to say that the jury could justifiably find from it that the defendants and others acted in concert, and were .actuated by malice, and that the result of the joint effort was the breach of the plaintiff’s contract by the school board.
The evidence was not such as to require a finding that the defendants were jointly engaged in the commission of'a malicious tort. It ■supports it. A finding the other way would be sustained. The school was somewhat demoralized. There was some trouble between the plaintiff and the teachers. The local community was taking part in the trouble. The jury might have concluded, but did not, that the •defendants were working in the interest of the schools and bore no malice.
Ordinarily a reduction by such a percentage cannot be sustained. The improper considerations that influence the jury in returning a verdict so excessive are likely to affect the jury in their consideration of the question of liability.
The ease is one where a jury might find very substantial damages, or might find slight damages. Those engaged in,teaching are in a way under official surveillance of the department of public education, and the manner of the plaintiff’s discharge lessened his opportunities for future employment and affected unfavorably his advancement. Perhaps the verdict in its full amount would have been sustained. It surely would have been sustained after a slight reduction. If the plaintiff had appealed from the conditional order, perhaps he would have prevailed. The order is sustained by holding that the verdict would have been sustained either at its full amount, or as reduced to a sum which would make ineffectual the argument that the improper considerations that induced so large an award affected the result upon the issue as to liability, and that the error of so great a reduction was in favor of the defendants. The case is not controlled by Johnson v. Great Northern Ry. Co. 107 Minn. 285, 119 N. W. 1061, or Goss v. Goss, 102 Minn. 346, 113 N. W. 690.
We have examined all the assignments of error. None of those not discussed require specific notice.
Order affirmed.