111 P. 348 | Mont. | 1910
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
The facts surrounding this case are set forth fully in Flaherty v. Butte Electric Ry. Co. et al., 40 Mont. 454, 135 Am. St. Rep. 630, 107 Pac. 416, which was an action by the minor, by his guardian, to recover damages sustained by the child. The present action is brought by the father of the same child to recover damages for the loss of the child’s services from the date of the injury until the minor reached his majority, for costs of medical attention, etc. The jury returned a verdict in- favor of plaintiff for $100, and he, being dissatisfied, moved for a new trial. The motion was granted, and the defendants have appealed from the order.
1. The complaint in this action, so far as it charges negligence, is substantially the same as the complaint in the Flaherty Case cited above, and the evidence touching the cause of the injury is the same in the two cases. In Flaherty v. Butte Electric Co., cited above, we held that there was such a variance between the allegations of the complaint and the proof as amounted to a failure of proof. We are now asked to say that the trial court should not have granted a new trial in this instance, because, it is argued, a new trial must result in a verdict against the plaintiff. But this argument ignores altogether the right of plaintiff to amend his complaint, and a decision by this court in conformity with appellants’ view would preclude any amendment at all. Whether plaintiff can amend his complaint to meet his proof is not before us now, and cannot arise until an amendment is offered; and therefore we decline to hold on this appeal that our former decision is conclusive against the plaintiff’s right to recover under any view of the case.
2. One ground of plaintiff’s motion for a new trial is insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict. We are confronted now with the question: May a plaintiff who has recovered a verdict in his favor in a sum less than he deems himself entitled to under the evidence ask for a new trial on the
(a) In civil actions, where the evidence is conflicting, the verdict must be in favor of the party who has the affirmative of an issue, and who produces in favor of such issue a preponderance of the evidence. (Revised Codes, sec. 8028.) In other words, this section provides that a preponderance of the evidence is the least that will support a verdict in such a case; and, if in such case the evidence does not preponderate in favor of the party asserting the affirmative of the issue, then it is insufficient to sustain a verdict in his favor upon that issue, according to the provision of the Code cited above. This seems to be logical, and we are satisfied that it is correct.
(b) In civil actions where the evidence is not conflicting, the verdict must be in favor of the party who has the affirmative of an issue and who has produced the uncontradicted evidence in support of it.. In order to make an application of the provision of our Code relative to new trials (section 6794), let us assume that there is not any conflict whatever in the evidence as to the amount which the plaintiff in a given ease is entitled to recover, if he is entitled to recover at all, and the only, conflict arises upon his right to recover. If then the jury in such a case decides in favor of his right to recover, but returns a verdict for an amount less than the uncontradicted evidence shows he is entitled to receive, may he then have a new trial upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict? In Landsman v. Thompson, 9 Mont. 182, 22 Pac. 1148, this court answered the query in the affirmative, but gave little attention to the question of practice, apparently assuming the correctness of the position.
If our Code of Civil Procedure contained the same provision as our Penal Code, there could not be any question of this kind raised, for section 9350 provides that in a criminal case a new trial may be had when the verdict is contrary to the evidence. Is there any substantial difference between the provisions. of our two Codes cited above? As early as 1862 this question.came
Tbe California Code of Civil Procedure contains tbe same provision as our section 6794, and tbe California Penal Code the same provision as our section 9350 above. In 1 Spelling on New Trial and Appellate Practice, section 236, tbe author, in considering tbe provisions of tbe California Code, pointed out tbe apparent distinction between tbe two sections, but concludes: “And yet in practice no such distinction between tbe respective provisions of tbe Code of Civil Procedure and tbe Penal Code as is here pointed out has ever been made by tbe courts. ’ ’ The authorities are not altogether in harmony upon tbe question now
3. The trial court must have held that the verdict for only $100 was against the evidence; that, if the services of the boy from the time of his injury to the date of his majority would have been of any value to the father had he not been injured, they would have amounted in value to more than the sum fixed by the jury. In reaching this conclusion the court doubtless took into consideration the fact that our Codes (section 965) recognize the right of a parent to require his child to work from the time he is fourteen years of age, except in certain employments mentioned in section 1746, and that to say that a healthy boy from the time he is fourteen cannot earn’ more than $100 in the next seven years, or less than $15 per year, or $1.25 per month, is simply preposterous; that, if entitled to recover at all, the father is entitled to the gross earnings of the minor without any deductions for cost of maintenance. (Mauerman v. St. Louis, 1. M.& S. R. Co., 41 Mo. App. 348.)
4. But it is earnestly insisted that there is not any evidence in the record to justify a verdict even for $100. It is true that the plaintiff did not offer any evidence tending to show the earning capacity, in and about Butte, of boys under the age of twenty-one; but we are not prepared to say at this time that there is not circumstantial evidence in the record sufficient to justify a verdict in a substantial amount. At the time of the injury the boy was less than three years old. From the very nature of things, it is practically impossible to produce direct evidence from which to determine with any degree of exactness the amount which such a child would be able to earn had he not been injured. In such cases much must be left to the enlightened consciences of the jurors, aided by the circumstances of
We have had to consider this appeal unaided by any brief by respondent, who has not appeared at all in this court; but after due consideration we do not feel satisfied.in saying that the trial court abused its discretion in granting plaintiff a new trial, and the order is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.