182 Mo. App. 153 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is an action brought by the unsuccessful defendant in an ejectment suit to recover for improvements placed on the land in good faith by him prior to his knowledge of the adverse title, as provided for by sections 2401 and 2402, R. S. 1909'. It is the same suit, one phase of which was drawn in question in the case of State ex rel. v. Foard, 251 Mo. 51, 157 S. W. 619, wherein the Supreme Court held that on the bringing of such suit for improvements the trial court could issue a restraining order or injunction preventing the taking of possession pending such proceedings without requiring any injunction bond. No other phase of the case was there passed on. On the trial in the circuit court the plaintiff here (defendant in ejectment) prevailed in the sum of $600.00 and this appeal is from an order granting a new trial.
The defendant is plaintiff’s second wife, having obtained a divorce from him shortly before she sued
We have stated the facts most favorably to plaintiff,’ as we should do where the jury have found in his favor. The defendant, however, claimed and testified that she furnished the money by her labor which paid for most, if not all, the improvements in question. She was corroborated to some extent as to furnishing’ part of the money at least. There is a sharp conflict in the evidence along this line and it is not altogether satisfactory on either side.
Under the instructions given the jury found that plaintiff made the improvements on the said lot in good faith, believing he was the owner of said property, and assessed the value of same at $600.00.. The trial court granted a new trial without doing as the statute directs in specifying the grounds for which same was granted. This the court should always do, Stoner v. Royar, 200 Mo. 444, 450, 98 S. W. 601, but its failure to do so does not render the' order nugatory. [Cunningham v. Atterbury, 163 Mo. App. 594, 596, 147 S. W. 495; Sharp v. Odom, 121 Mo. App. 565, 97 S. W. 225.]
One of the grounds stated in the motion for new trial is that the verdict of the jury is against the weight of the evidence. The defendant justifies the action of the trial court in granting the new trial on this ground alone. Her one point presented here is that the trial court was acting within the scope of its powers in granting a new trial for any reason stated in the motion and if any such reason is good, then its action must be sustained. The doctrine is then invoked that trial courts have large discretion in granting new trials, especially where the weight of the evidence is involved, and the Supreme Court will not interfere with the exercise of that power unless it appears that it was unwisely exercised. [Bank v. Mc-
These authorities fully sustain the legal proposition last stated and if it be held that the trial court granted the new trial on the ground that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, then this court will not interfere with the trial court’s action in so doing. The whole difficulty is whether the court can presume that the trial court exercised its discretion in granting a new trial on that ground in the absence of an affirmative showing that it did so.
As the law existed prior to the enactment of the statute requiring the trial court to specify the grounds on which the new trial is granted, the order sustaining same would be upheld by the appellate court if it could do so on any ground stated in the motion exclusive of the one- that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. [Bank v. Armstrong, 92 Mo. 265, 4 S. W. 720, and cases cited; Millar v. Madison Car Co., 130 Mo. 517, 522, 31 S. W. 574.] In the Millar case, just cited, the court pointed out that in cases where the trial court obeyed the statute and specified one or more grounds for sustaining the motion, then it would be presumed that the court, in specifying the grounds which it deemed sufficient to warrant the granting of a new trial, also held all other grounds insufficient; that the sustaining it on one ground would be held as overruling it on the other grounds. The court there said: “But the circuit court, in this case, did specify its reasons on the record, and we are not at liberty to indulge the presumption that it granted it upon some other grounds. ‘Expréssio unius exclusio alterius’ is especially applicable when it is considered that the statute requires the court to set forth its rea
'This distinction has been recognized every since- and the law is settled that where the trial court grants, a new trial, specifying one or more grounds for so doing, but not the one that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, then the appellate court will not justify its action on that ground, the presumption, being that the trial court overruled it as to this ground.. [Crawford v. Stock Yards Co., 215 Mo. 394, 114 S. W. 1057; Richter v. Railroad, 145 Mo. App. 1, 7, 129 S. W. 1055; Cornell v. Insurance Co. (Mo. App.), 165 S. W. 858; Gabbert v. Evans (Mo. App.), 166 S. W. 635 ; Gibson v. Ducker, 170 Mo. App. 135, 146, 155 S. W. 462.] And the rule is equally well settled that where-the court, as it did. here, grants the motion for new trial generally and without specifying any ground for so doing, then the appellate court must look to every ground in the motion, inclusive of the one that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, and justify-
In this case there was substantial evidence that the defendant furnished part of the money, in cash and by her labor, going into the improvements sued for and the plaintiff’s evidence is not very clear or satisfactory as to furnishing as much money as was awarded to him. Indulging the presumption in favor •of the trial court’s action, we cannot say that that court abused its discretion in granting the new trial as being against the weight of the evidence. We desire to again admonish trial courts, as has our Supreme Court, to observe the statute in granting new trials and specify therein the grounds on which the court acts.