Plаintiff, a truck driver injured in a crossing collision with a railroad car during a switching operation, appeals frоm an order granting the railroad a new trial after a jury had awarded the plaintiff $3,200 damages.
The new trial was оrdered because the trial court became convinced after the verdict that it had erroneously given a requested instruction on “future” damages. As the evidence contained no basis for such an instruction, the court properly granted the new trial.
Goggan v. Consolidated Millinery,
The defendant cross-appeals, asserting that its motion for а directed verdict should have been allowed. The railroad contends that the evidence proved the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. We have concluded that the evidenсe on the issues of negligence and contributory negligence presented questions for the jury. Accordingly, there was likewise no error in denying the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.
Finally, the plaintiff urges that, if a new trial is allowed, the issue should be limited to the amount of damages. The jury found liability, and the instruction error went to damages only. Accordingly, he argues, the issue of fault has been resolved and should not again be placed at large.
The segregation of issues in suits in equity is a familiar technique for saving litigants’ money and time. On remand for a new trial, the same technique has long been employed in equity suits to eliminate issues that no longer require adjudication.
Dunn v. Henderson et al.,
In actions at law, likewise, this court has remanded cases for the limited retrial of specific issues when it appeared upon appeal that no party would be prejudiced thereby аnd that no useful purpose could be served by a complete new trial.
In
Brown v. Bonesteele,
Brown v. Bonesteele
was followed in
Western Feed Co. v. Heidloff, 230
Or 324,
The only personal-injury case in this state in which we have limited the new trial to the sole issue of damages is
Skultety v. Humphreys,
In the ordinary two-party personal-injury case, however, evidence of fault can influence the jury’s measurement of damages; and the kind and degree of injuries may influence some jurors in their evaluation of the evidence on liability. See Rosenberg, Court Congestion; Status, Causes and Proposed Remedies, in The Courts, The Public and the Law Explosion (Jones ed 1965). Whatever logicаl problems these elements of lawyer folklore may suggest, we believe that neither side in this type of case should be encouraged to manipulate errors in one trial to gain tactical advantage in a new trial before a new jury. Accordingly, we hold that the new trial in a personal-injury case ordinarily should be a new trial on all contested factual issues, regardless of the ability of the parties on appeаl to pinpoint error so as to show that the error, if any, may have affected only one issue. There will, of course, be exceptional cases in which the trial court, in the exercise of judicial discretion, properly will limit the issues for a new trial. But the standard to be applied in the exercise of this discretion is reasonable certainty that the issue or issues to be eliminated from the second trial are no longer viаble issues in the case and that their removal will not prejudice the right of either party to the kind of jury trial to which he would have been entitled but for the error or errors necessitating the new trial.
Affirmed.
