This was a suit for a balance due on a promissory note. Payments had been made on the note, but the number and amounts were in dispute. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $547.80. This was in accordance with a claim of defendants as to the principal of the amount due. However, the verdict did not include interest to the date of its rendition on the balance of principal remaining due when the last partial payment was made. This was evident. The plaintiff moved for a-new trial because of the insufficiency of the verdict, pointing out in her motion the omission to include the interest and specifying the amount omitted, to wit, $89.21. The defendants consented to judgment on the verdict and for the interest mistakenly omitted from it. The court overruled the motion for new trial and rendered judgment for $637.01, the amount of the verdict and omitted interest. This was not error.
When the amount of a verdict is manifestly too small, and the deficiency can be ascertained and supplied by a mathematical calculation, as in this case, by adding the stipulated rate of interest on a balance due on a promissory note, it is not error, as against the party in whose favor the verdict was returned, to render judgment for him for the correct amount, and refuse a new trial because of the mistake. In this case the jury had found against the plaintiff as to the facts and times and amounts of the payments made. The meritorious issues of the case had been thereby settled as fairly as though interest had not been mistakenly omitted from the calculation. There could not be any dispute as to the rate of interest or the time it ran since the last payment was made. Hence, had
Other claims of error are made. One relating to the competency of witness was cured by an instruction to the jury. Another as to prejudicial remarks of counsel in argument is not presented in a way to enable us to notice it. The others are not well founded. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.