7 S.E.2d 603 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
1. The first grant of a new trial will not be disturbed unless the verdict as found by the jury or as directed by the judge was as a matter of law demanded.
2. Where the damages sued for are not liquidated, but are speculative only, and rest in the discretion of the jury under the evidence, notwithstanding the evidence may demand a finding that the defendant is liable to the plaintiff in some amount, a verdict in the amount found by the jury is not as a matter of law demanded.
The only question presented is whether the court erred in granting a new trial to White. In determining this question it is immaterial as to what are the respective rights of the plaintiffs and the defendants, Mrs. H. H. Lawson, as to the body of the deceased. If Mrs. H. H. Lawson was not the widow of the deceased and therefore had no right to disinter his body, of course no such right rested with the undertaker, White, who it appears was procured by Mrs. H. H. Lawson to disinter the body. If Mrs. H. H. Lawson was the widow of the deceased and had the right to control the disposition of his body, White, in acting for and under authority of Mrs. H. H. Lawson, would have been justified in disinterring the body, unless he was guilty of trespass in going on the plaintiffs' burial lot for that purpose.
The first grant of a new trial will not be disturbed unless the verdict as found by the jury, or as directed by the judge, was as a matter of law demanded. Code, § 6-1608; Cloud v.Hawkes Co.,
Where the damages sued for are not liquidated but are speculative only, and rest in the discretion of the jury under the evidence, notwithstanding the evidence may demand a finding that the defendant is liable to the plaintiff in some amount, a verdict in the amount found by the jury is not as a matter of law demanded. Smith v. Maddox-Rucker Banking Co.,
Judgment affirmed. Sutton and Felton, JJ., concur.