141 S.E. 586 | N.C. | 1928
Action to recover damages for personal injury. The issues were answered as follows:
1. Was the plaintiff injured by the negligence of the defendants, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: Yes.
2. If so, was the plaintiff guilty of negligence which contributed to said injury? Answer: No.
3. What damages, if anything, is the plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendants? Answer: $750.
Upon the verdict the following judgment was rendered:
This cause coming on for hearing, and the defendants having moved for judgment as of nonsuit at the close of plaintiff's evidence, and again *232 at the close of all the evidence, and the court having reserved its ruling upon said motion and submitted issues to the jury, and the same having been answered as appears from the minutes, the plaintiff tenders judgment upon the verdict, which the court refuses to sign. Defendants move to set the verdict aside, and this motion is denied.
But the court, being of opinion that evidence is not sufficient to support the allegations of the complaint, especially in that it is alleged that the immediate cause of plaintiff's injury was the fact that Colon Neighbors directed him to kneel before the gin and remove cotton, and there being no evidence that Colon Neighbors did so; and the court also being of the opinion that said verdict ought not to stand in good conscience, under the pleadings and proof:
It is now considered by the court, notwithstanding the verdict, ordered and adjudged that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and this action is dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff and the surety on his prosecution bond.
In rendering judgment against the plaintiff, "notwithstanding the verdict" in his favor, the trial court inadvertently fell into error. At common law a judgment non obstante veredicto could be granted only when the plea confessed the cause of action and set up matters in avoidance which, if true, were insufficient to constitute either a defense or a bar to the action. It was entered only upon the application of the plaintiff, and never in favor of the defendant. Under the modern practice, it may be given for either party, but only when the party against whom the verdict was returned is entitled to judgment upon the pleadings. 33 C. J., 1178; Fowlerv. Murdock,
The remaining questions are whether the inconsistent recitals in the judgment are not such as to prevent the giving of relief to either party and whether a new trial is not necessary. If, as the judgment recites, the evidence was insufficient the motion for nonsuit should have been allowed; but the motion, although reserved, was disposed of, if at all, only inferentially after the verdict had been returned. According to *233
the decision in Riley v. Stone,
In the next place, if the verdict stands the plaintiff is entitled to judgment; although it is said that it "ought not to stand in good conscience," it remains in force because the motion to set it aside was denied. While the verdict upon its face entitles the plaintiff to judgment, the judge refused to sign the judgment which the plaintiff tendered. If we simply reverse the judgment the verdict will stand, and in that event the plaintiff will recover damages to which, according to the judgment, he is not entitled upon the evidence; and as the motion to dismiss the action cannot now be allowed, we are of opinion that the judgment should be reversed, the verdict set aside, and a new trial awarded. The judgment differs materially from that which was rendered in Davis v. R. R.,
New trial.