Gary MADDOX
v.
Jаck MUIRHEAD, Jr., and North Jackson Hotel Properties, Ltd. d/b/a Ramada Plaza Hotel.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Robert L. Wells, Jackson, Attorney for Appellant.
Joe Moss, Michael V. Cory, Jackson, Attorneys for Appellees.
EN BANC.
ON MOTION TO CLARIFY AND CORRECT OPINION
WALLER, Justice, for the Court:
¶ 1. The opinion of the Court in this case was originally issued directing a new trial unless all parties acсepted an additur of $10,000. Thereafter, Muirhead and Ramada, the defendants/appellees, filed with the Court notices of acceptance of the additur and motions seeking clarification and correction of that opinion urging that the right to accept an additur lies exclusively with the defendants. The motions were presented to the en banc conference, and upon careful consideration, it is found that *743 they should be granted and that the original opinion shоuld be amended to correctly reflect the Court's intent. Historically, additurs have been granted giving to the party suffering the judgment, and only that party, the right to accept the increase in the award or to have a new trial. Our statutes clearly аuthorize affirmance conditioned on an additur. Miss.Code Ann. § 11-1-55 (1991). In Odom v. Roberts,
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
¶ 2. Gary Maddox ("Maddox") sued for injuries he sustained in an altercation with Jack Muirhead, Jr., ("Muirhead") while both men were patrons at the 1001 Bar located on the premises of the Ramada Plazа Hotel ("Ramada"). The jury returned a verdict in favor of Maddox in the amount of $2,900.00, which was reduced by $580 to reflect Maddox's percentage of fault. The trial court denied Maddox's request for an additur or a new trial on the issue of damages. He nоw appeals from the denial of his motion to this Court and assigns the following issue for our consideration:
WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY NOT GRANTING THE MOTION FOR ADDITUR OR IN THE ALTERNATIVE A NEW TRIAL AS TO DAMAGES ONLY.
DISCUSSION OF THE LAW
¶ 3. The law on the subject of additurs begins with Miss.Code Ann. § 11-1-55 (1991):
The supreme court or any other court of record in a case in which money damages were awarded may overrule a motion for a new trial or affirm on direct or cross appeal, upon condition of an additur or remittitur, if the court finds that the damages are excessive or inadequate for the reason that the jury or trier of facts was influenced by bias, prejudice, or passion, or that the damages awarded were contrary to the overwhelming weight of credible evidence. If such additur or remittitur be not accepted then the court may direct a new trial on damages only. If the additur or remittitur is accepted and the other party perfects a direct appeal, then the party accepting the additur or remittitur shall have the right to cross appeal for the purpose of reversing the action of the court in regard to the additur or remittitur.
¶ 4. This Court has expounded upon the above statutory language in the following instances.
¶ 5. In reviewing a trial court's grant or denial of an additur, this Court's standard of review is limited to an abuse of discretion. Rodgers v. Pascagoula Pub. Sch. Dist.,
¶ 6. Turning to the case at bar, the record reveals that Maddox incurred $2,831.25 in medical costs from injuries sustained in the fight. He also claimed regular lost wages of $21,877.60 and lost overtime pay of at least $4,000.00. As proof of pain and suffering, Maddox testified that he spent 5 months in a leg cast, and suffered a bloody nose, a bleeding ear, and other pain and suffering.
¶ 7. The jury's $2,900 award in favor of Maddox was without rеgard to fault. Fault was apportioned by the jury as follows:
Gary Maddox 20%
____
Alan Salter[1] 25%
____
Jack Muirhead, Jr. 50%
____
Ramada Plaza Hotel 5%
____
TOTAL 100%
____
After a reduction for Maddox's portion of fault, judgment was entered against Muirhead and Ramada in the amount of $1,160 eaсh.
¶ 8. Maddox's jury instruction on damages contained the following three factors to be considered by the jury.
1. The type of injury to the Plaintiff, if any, and the length of its duration.
2. Past pain and suffering and resulting mental anguish, if any.
3. Medical expenses incurred.
Nowhere did Maddox include damages for lost income and overtime. He did testify that he calculated his lost income and overtime using his weekly pay. However, his testimony was not corroborated by documentation or other evidence as to the amount of lost wages and overtimе. It is reasonable to conclude that the jury did not credit his testimony concerning lost wages and overtime. Brake v. Speed,
¶ 9. The verdict of the jury, before reduction for Maddox's percentage of fault, compensated him for his medical bills and left $69, apрarently for past pain and suffering. After reduction for his negligence, Maddox is left with a total of $2,320. Maddox points to a litany of decisions by this Court granting additurs where the jury award was either less than the medical bills, or equal to the medical bills but leaving nothing fоr pain and suffering. See Moody,
¶ 10. In the above cases, the plaintiff either presented corroborating testimony concerning his injuries and pain and suffering, or suffered some sort of permanent disability as a result of his injury. Maddox neither suffered a pеrmanent injury nor did he provide any supporting testimony as to his pain and suffering. Nonetheless the jury assessed Muirhead's fault at 50% and Ramada's at 5%. Essentially, the *745 jury award fails to compensate Maddox for medical bills that were uncontested by either defendant. Further, there is nothing left for any pain and suffering that Maddox endured as a result of his injuries. We find that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to grant an additur. The jury award in this instance was so inadequate as to shock the conscience and agаinst the overwhelming weight of the evidence. While the jury was free to accept or reject Maddox's uncorroborated and undocumented testimony concerning lost wages and overtime, the medical bills were not contradicted, and no allowance was made for pain and suffering.
CONCLUSION
¶ 11. We direct a new trial on damages unless the defendants accept an additur of $10,000. If the defendants accept the additur within 15 days of the date of this decision, the judgment will be affirmed for $12,320, plus intеrest from the date of the judgment. Otherwise, the judgment will be reversed, and the case will be remanded for a new trial on damages only.
¶ 12. AFFIRMED ON CONDITION OF ACCEPTANCE OF ADDITUR OF $10,000 BY THE DEFENDANTS WITHIN FIFTEEN (15) DAYS.
PRATHER, C.J., SULLIVAN AND PITTMAN, P.JJ., BANKS, SMITH AND MILLS, JJ., CONCUR.
BANKS, J., CONCURS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
McRAE, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
COBB, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
BANKS, Justice, CONCURRING:
¶ 13. Were I writing on a clean slate, I would take the position expressed by Justice McRae in his dissent. Indeed, I took thаt position in Odom v. Roberts,
McRAE, Justice, DISSENTING:
¶ 14. The majority's decision requiring only the defendant to accept the additur in this case to avoid a new trial on damages violаtes the constitutional right to a trial by jury. When the moving party asks for either an additur or a remittitur and only the losing party is required to agree to the amount added or remitted, the movant's right to trial by jury is violated. Hence, as is developed below, such action allows the moving party to be ambushed. It is for this reason that I must respectfully dissent.
¶ 15. Section 31 of the Mississippi Constitution provides that "[t]he right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate...." Miss. Const. art. 3, § 31 (1890). We have always vehemently safeguarded the right to a trial by jury, even when interpreting the exception to that right imposed by the rules governing summary judgment. See Hurst v. Southwest Miss. Legal Servs. Corp.,
*746 ¶ 16. In his motion to сlarify and correct opinion, Muirhead cites our decision in Odom,
The statute employs a creative scheme that accommodates the right. The party whose verdict is being altered adversеly to his interest-who is being put in a worse position than the jury put him-is given the procedural opportunity to claim his right to object, to say "No" to the additur or remittitur, as the case may be, and start from scratch at a new trial on damages only.
Id. at 120.
¶ 17. This reаsoning is flawed because it assumes that only a defendant may be adversely affected by an additur, or that only a plaintiff may be adversely affected by a remittitur. Consider a situation in which the plaintiff files a motion for an additur in a case in which thе jury's verdict failed to account for $200,000 in recoverable damages. If the trial court grants the additur, but only increases the jury's award by $1,000, the additur becomes more adverse to the plaintiff than to the defendant. Yet, under the majority's analysis of the current statutory scheme, only the defendant has the right to reject such an inadequate additur. The result is the same in the case of an insufficient remittitur where the defendant actually becomes the adversely affected party and has no rеmedy other than to file a direct appeal. The prejudice is considerably worsened on the appellate level. If we allow ourselves the same unfettered discretion in awarding additurs and remittiturs without the safeguard of acceptance by both parties, the slighted party has no recourse. He is bound by an inequitable verdict in violation of his right to a trial by jury.
¶ 18. As Justice Banks pointed out in his dissent in Odom:
[B]oth sides have a right to a jury trial and a fair trial at that. A verdict which, as to damages, is so disconsonant with the evidenсe as to evince bias and prejudice should be treated as a nullity with no party having rights therein. The trial court's suggestions as to adjustments to damages, in the form of an additur or remmittitur [sic], should be taken as just that, suggestions which the parties may accеpt in lieu of new trial. Such a procedure would promote a suggested award which is fairly responsive to the evidence rather than one targeted to a minimum sustainable verdict.
Odom,
NOTES
Notes
[1] Salter was a named defendant but he was dismissed because the statute of limitations had run as to him.
