107 Fla. 705 | Fla. | 1932
Lead Opinion
This action is upon a fire insurance policy for $5,000.00 on "tires, tubes and appurtenances" etc. Two previous judgments for the plaintiff were reversed. Great Am. Ins. Co. vs. Suarez,
The bill of exceptions duly authenticated by the trial Judge and made a part of the transcript of the record brought here on this writ of error, contains a statement that on July 19, 1930, the defendant was by order of court made at the same term in which the verdict was rendered, July 16, 1930, allowed until July 22, 1930, to file a motion for new trial and that such motion was "filed, docketed *707 and recorded" July 22, 1930. This motion for new trial was by order denied by the trial Judge, August 16, 1930, during the term in which the verdict and judgment were rendered. The defendant was by the same order allowed ninety days from that date to present a bill of exceptions. A bill of exceptions, which included the motion for new trial, the order denying such motion, and an exception taken thereto, was duly authenticated by the trial Judge on October 23, 1930. The transcript also contains, outside of the bill of exceptions and without any authentication whatever by the trial Judge, a motion filed October 23, 1930, to strike the motion for new trial with objections thereto, and an order granting the motion to strike, with an exception thereto. As the motion for new trial was filed within the time allowed under Section 4498 (2811) C. G. L., and as the trial Judge afterwards considered and denied the motion, it will be assumed on this record that the motion for new trial was duly presented to the court, unless the contrary is duly shown by a properly authenticated transcript.
Even if, after the writ of error was issued to the judgment in the cause and filed in the trial court, the Judge of that court had authority to strike the motion for new trial that had been considered and denied by him, and the motion, the order thereon, and an exception thereto, had been incorporated in a bill of exceptions that had been duly authenticated by such Judge, the transcript brought here on the writ of error does not present the motion to strike the motion for new trial and the order made thereon in such authenticated form that the motion to strike and the order thereon with the exception thereto, may be considered by this court. Such motion to strike the motion for new trial and the order granting the motion to strike and the exception to such order, are not a part of the record proper, but are mattersin pais which are required by law to be, *708 but are not, authenticated by the trial court by appropriate bill of exceptions or by other method, if any, that is permissible under the law and the rules of the court. Section 4612, Compiled General Laws, does not cure the defect in the transcript, since the motion to strike and the order thereon and the exception to the order, are not in any way properly authenticated. The certificate of the clerk to the transcript cannot give authenticity to matters in pais which had not been duly authenticated by the trial court. The mere copy of the order signed by the Judge granting the motion to strike the motion for new trial is not due authentication, since the motion for new trial and the order made thereon and the exception thereto, being matters in pais, the motion to strike and the order thereon, and the exception thereto, are also matters in pais and should in some proper manner be authenticated by the trial court and not merely by the certificate of the clerk attached to the transcript on writ of error. The motion for new trial, the order denying the motion and the exception taken to the order as contained in the certified transcript of the duly authenticated bill of exceptions may be considered by this court upon appropriate assignments of error.
A provision of the policy is that "this company shall not be liable beyond the actual value of the property at the time any loss or damage occurs." The court charged the jury that:
"If you find the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this case he is entitled to recover for whatever the amount you find was the value of the goods in there at the time of the fire, that would be his loss under the terms of this policy."
The evidence considered as an entirety clearly does not show that the actual value of the property at the time of the loss or damages awarded by the verdict and the judgment; and as a consequence the verdict is contrary to the *709 evidence and the law. Further and detailed discussion of matters argued is unnecessary.
Reversed.
ELLIS, TERRELL, BROWN AND DAVIS, J.J., concur.
BUFORD, C.J., dissents.
Addendum
Because this case has been several times reversed by this Court and has resulted favorably to defendant in error on several trials had afterwards (See Great American Ins. Co. of N Y vs. Suarez,
But before the re-hearing is had we deem it imperative to discuss and dispose of those questions which have been suggested by the petition for re-hearing relating to the transcript of the record before us and our previous decision thereon.
The motion for new trial was, within the time allowed, filed July 22, 1930, and it was entertained by the Judge who denied the motion August 16, 1930. The motion and the order denying the motion for new trial and the exception thereto appear in the record proper and also in the bill of exceptions.
A writ of error was issued August 21, 1930, by the Clerk of the Circuit Court acting as Clerk of this Court for that purpose. Upon the issuance of the writ of error the cause was transferred to the jurisdiction of this Court; and even without a supersedeas the Circuit Court had no authority *710 to strike the motion for new trial on October 23, 1930, since the motion for a new trial and the order thereon were a part of the cause that had been transferred to this Court upon the issuance of the writ of error by the clerk of the Circuit Court, August 21, 1930. Besides this, the motion for new trial and the order thereon and the exception taken to the order, were incorporated as a part of the bill of exceptions which was authenticated by the Judge, October 23, 1930. The motion for new trial, not the order denying the motion, was stricken by the Circuit Judge, October 23, 1930. Even if, instead of striking the motion for new trial, which motion, with the order denying it and the exception taken to such order, were then in the jurisdiction of this Court, the Circuit Judge has required the motion to strike the motion for new trial, the objections thereto and the order thereon, with the exception thereto, to be incorporated in a duly authenticated bill of exceptions, and included in the transcript sent here under the writ of error, the effect, if any, which such matters so authenticated by the Judge would have upon the motion for new trial that had been entertained and denied by the Circuit Judge, August 16, 1930, would be for this Court to consider if duly presented.
But the matters relative to striking the motion for new trial are adversary proceedings in pais, had two months after the motion for new trial was denied; and such matters in pais are not so authenticated that they may be considered by this Court. It is now too late to authenticate a bill of exceptions covering the motion to strike, the objections thereto, and the order thereon with the exceptions thereto, because when, upon adversary proceedings on October 23rd, the order was made striking the motion for new trial, no bill of exceptions was then authenticated covering such matter under Sections 4609 (2904), 4614 (2906) Compiled General Laws; and no further time was *711 allowed by special order in which to do so under Rule 97.
The opinion and judgment of this Court are correct on the record as it then existed in the Circuit Court. Brown v. State,
In the Brown case, supra, the mandate had been transmitted to the lower court. In this case the mandate has not been sent down, but the judgment here is correct on *712 the record as it then stood in the Circuit Court; and as the matters sought to be made a part of the bill of exceptions cannot now be properly authenticated in a bill of exceptions for consideration by this Court, an order permitting the Circuit Judge to amend the bill of exceptions so as to include such matters would be futile. Section 4614, Compiled General Laws, does not avail in this case.
The motion to amend the record is denied. A rehearing is granted on the record as heretofore considered, the case to be assigned for argument before the Court en banc at an early date.
BUFORD, C.J. AND WHITFIELD, TERRELL AND BROWN, J.J., concur.
Addendum
In the former opinion on this writ of error the court held that "the evidence considered as an entirety clearly does not show that the actual value of the property at the time of the loss or damage was even approximately the principal amount of damages awarded by the verdict and the judgment."
Upon a rehearing granted, the record has been again considered and it is now ordered and adjudged that if the plaintiff below shall, within ten days from the filing of the mandate of this court in the court below, enter a remittitur for one thousand dollars of the principal amount awarded as of the date of the judgment, and also one third of the amount allowed for attorney fees, the judgment shall stand affirmed as of the date thereof for the remainder; otherwise, the judgment shall stand reversed for a new trial. F. R. N. Co. v. Webster,
It is so ordered.
DAVIS, C.J. AND WHITFIELD, BROWN AND BUFORD, J.J., AND ROWE, Circuit Judge, concur;
ELLIS, J., absent on account of illness. *713
Addendum
In its opinion filed February 2, 1933, the Court affirmed the judgment on condition that a remittitur be entered by defendant in error.
The practice of affirming judgments on conditions of remittitur originated in this State at an early date. See Simpson v. Daniels,
In cases where some legal liability is shown by the record brought here on writ of error, but it is plainly apparent from that same record that under no circumstances could the Court justifiably under the law uphold the amount of damages allowed by the jury in that particular case, without better or additional proof on a new trial, which better or additional proof may, or may not, be available to be offered by the plaintiff, should a new trial be had, the practice here is in general to affirm the judgment as to the liability shown, and permit a voluntary remittitur by the prevailing party to purge the judgment of obviously excessive damages, provided the plaintiff wishes to pursue that course, instead of suffering a new trial to fix an amount of damages that would be supported by the record. This carries out the constitutional mandate to the Courts *714 to administer justice speedily and without delay, by permitting cases to be concluded promptly without waiting for a new trial if prevailing plaintiff below is willing to accept what the Court indicates is the maximum amount of damages he can recover without submitting to a new trial and offering better or additional proof on the subject of his damages.
There is, however, an exception to the rule that where liability is shown but the damages not fully proved that the judgment will be affirmed on condition of remittitur. This exception is illustrated by such cases as Carlton v. Vaux,
In this case there were several trials, all of which resulted in favor of the plaintiff below. All the evidence has already been offered that may reasonably be expected to be produced. The court could not justifiably sustain the verdict for the entire amount of damages recovered. Yet after several successful jury trials it could not be said that liability had not been shown by plaintiff for some recovery as against defendant's defense.
In the opinion of this Court filed February 2, 1933, it was held that if the plaintiff below should, within ten days from the filing of the mandate of this Court in the Court below, enter a remittitur for one thousand dollars of the "principal amount awarded," as of the date the judgment, and also one-third of the amount allowed as attorney's fees, the judgment stand affirmed.
The "principal amount awarded" which was intended to be referred to, was the principal amount of three thousand *715 dollars named in the verdict. To put it another way, this Court has held that if plaintiff below will enter a remittitur, so as to reduce the recovery, as of July 16, 1930, to the principal sum of $2,000.00 with interest thereon from September 13, 1923, at 8% per annum, and $500.00 attorney's fees, the judgment will be permitted to stand, as of July 16, 1930, for the aggregate of the amounts just stated, which represent a deduction from the original amounts "awarded" by the verdict, of one third of the principal sums stated in the verdict. The opinion of February 2, 1933, as just explained, is therefore adhered to and a further re-hearing will be denied.
Where it plainly appears that damages awarded are excessive, when the evidence in the record is viewed as a whole, but it further appears that plaintiff has several times prevailed in several previous jury trials of the issues involved in the whole case, the Supreme Court, in order to permit the litigation to be concluded without unduly prolonging the case by a re-trial directed almost wholly to the question of damages, may permit a remittitur to be entered by plaintiff in order to avoid another new trial, although it would be warranted in absolutely and unconditionally reversing the judgment for a new trial in accordance with the exception to the general rule heretofore referred to.
Re-hearing denied.
DAVIS, C.J. AND WHITFIELD, BROWN AND BUFORD, J.J., concur.