10 Ga. 37 | Ga. | 1851
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This cause came on to be heard upon the bill, answer, exhibits and replication, admissions and proofs, it being a suit
The answer having admitted that the complainants were the only lawful family of the deceased testator, and having stated that the said estate was considerable, and much more than sufficient to pay all debts and demands against it, further stated, that by the will of the deceased he bad given seventeen negroes and certain other specific articles, and also the tenth part of all his crops remaining unsold, and the tenth part of all his ready money to his wife during her widowhood, (with the exception of the ready money, which he gave her absolutely,) then proceeded to deny the right of complainants to receive any reasonable maintenance from the said estate for the said twelve months. The other complainant, Susan Anna, having also been left a considerable estate by the testator, in the hands of trustees, for her benefit.
It was stated in the answer and admitted by the complainants, that the tenth part of the ready money, and the tenth part of the crops remaining unsold, together with most of the other specific legacies, as directed by the testator, were delivered over to the complainant, Elizabeth H. on account and in accordance with said will, soon after the death of the testator and wfithin twelve months thereafter; it being further admitted, by the defendants, however, that said money and specific articles were so delivered on account of said legacy, and not under the provisions of the Act of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia, passed in 1838, for the relief of widows and orphans.
It was further admitted by the defendants that complainant, Susan Anna Hopkins, was compelled to travel for her health, under the advice of her physician, as charged in the bill, and that the return of the executors to this bill of exceptions attached
The Court, after argument had, charged the Jury “ that the meaning of the adjective reasonable, is relative; that what would be a reasonable support and maintenance in one case, would be unreasonable in another, and that it was their province and duty to look to the circumstances in life of the testator and his family, the amount and situation of his estate, with the view of ascertaining what would be a reasonable support and maintenance for his wife and only child.”
And the Jury found in favor of the complainants the following decree: “ This cause came on to be heard upon bill, answer, replication and proof and exhibits, whereupon we, the Jury, order, adjudge, decree and find for the complainants the sum of six thousand dollars, and we order, adjudge and decree, that the defendants, as executors of William T. Hopkins, deceased, do pay over to the complainants, the widow and only child of the deceased, the said sum of six thousand dollars with costs of suit; and we further order, adjudge and decree, that the complainants have leave to issue execution, founded upon this decree, to collect the said sum of six thousand dollars, with costs of suit.”
Upon the finding of which decree, the complainants, by their solicitors, moved the Court for a new trial, upon the ground that the decree of the Jury was excessive in amount, and not such reasonable maintenance as is contemplated by the Act of the General Assembly, December 29, 1838.
Upon which motion, by consent of the solicitors, argument was had in vacation, the testimony hereinbefore recited to stand as the brief of the testimony, and his Honor, Judge Jackson, after hearing the argument, gave the following decision:
The bill in this case was filedby complainants, the wife and only legitimate child of Wm. T. Hopkins, deceased, to recover from the executors of his estate a reasonable support and maintenance for twelve months next ensuing immediately after his death, under the Act of 1838. It was in evidence before the Jury, that
1st. That his Honor, the Judge, erred in refusing to grant the new trial moved for in the above case.
2d. That his Honor erred in deciding that the amount of the decree was not such excessive maintenance, under a just construction of the Act of 1838, as required the interposition of the Court in granting a new trial.
The following is the return of the executors appended to the-record, and made a part thereof:
The Estate of Wm. T. Hopkins in account current with George-Lang and George W. Thomas, executors.
But, as was very pertinently remarked by Chief Justice Parsons, in the case of Coffin vs. Coffin, cited in the argument to enable the Court to draw the conclusion, that some foreign and disturbing influence has acted on the minds of the Jury, which naturally produced error or injustice; satisfactory evidence should be offered to show that the damages are excessive, and in our opinion, this evidence is not before us.
But where is the proof in the record to justify this inference? The Jury were taken from the neighborhood; there is no evi
Piad proof been introduced in the trial that three thousand dollars was an ample allowance for the widow and daughter in that part of the country, considering their condition in life and the size of the estate, then a verdict given for double that amount, would have carried on its face the evidence that it was founded in bias or prejudice. But no such testimony was tendered. Judges should be very cautious, therefore, how they overthrow verdicts given by twelve men on their oaths, on the ground of excessive damages, upon a matter left so entirely to their discretion, especially where the presiding Judge before whom the cause was tried, and who is presumed to have been familiar with all the facts, has refused to interfere. For this Court to order a re-hearing, under such circumstances, it must be made manifest by the p'oof that the damages were “ flagrantly outrageous and extravagant.”
The verdict, consequently, cannot be set aside.