125 Minn. 297 | Minn. | 1914
This action was brought to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. A verdict was returned for plaintiff on the trial below. Thereafter defendant moved in the alternative for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial. The trial court denied the motion for judgment, but granted a new trial upon the ground that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict. The two orders, as is usual in such cases, were embodied in one, from which defendant appealed. At the hearing in this court pláintiff’s counsel made the point that the order is not appealable and, therefore, that the appeal should be dismissed. The point is well taken and must be sustained.
Under the statute on the subject of appeals, as amended by chapter 474, p. 699, Laws 1913, (section 8001, Gr. S. 1913), an order granting a new trial is not appealable, except when based exclusively upon errors occurring at the trial. No appeal lies from such an order when granted upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, except it be a second or third order based upon the same ground. The new trial in this case was ordered on that ground, and under the amended statute the order is not appealable.
The object of the legislature in changing the statute was to limit appeals to this court upon questions of fact, and to avoid the presentation of such questions a second or third time, the whole purpose of which will be wholly nullified if orders of this kind are still to be held appealable. The intention of the law should not be thus circumvented, but the spirit thereof upheld and applied. The litigant is in no sense prejudiced. He has the undoubted right to present to this court the question whether the verdict of a jury is sustained by sufficient competent evidence, but he has no vested right to repeated appeals for the purpose of presenting the same question. He is entitled to a hearing upon that question and that is given in all cases upon an appeal from the final judgment.
The rule of our former decisions upon this subject, must, therefore, be understood as abrogated or changed by the amended statute, and that orders of this kind are no longer appealable.
Appeal dismissed.