57 Miss. 215 | Miss. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case was previously before us, and is reported in 62 Miss. 592. It is a suit upon a written instrument, whereby the maker acknowledges the receipt of three thousand dollars in Confederate treasury-notes and Mississippi cotton money, in payment of five thousand pounds of lint cotton, which cotton he obligates himself thereafter to deliver. The parties went to trial upon a plea of the general issue, and upon a special plea that the contract had been abandoned by the plaintiff before suit brought. When the case was previously in this court, we held that there had been no abandonment of the contract, and declared that the plaintiff was entitled, under the proof, to .a verdict for the value of the cotton.
Upon the subsequent trial in the court below, the jury returned a verdict in the following words: “We, the jury, find for the plaintiff. Valued ” [value] “ of Confederate and Mississippi cotton money at time paid, one hundred dollars, with six per cent interest per annum, amounting to one hundred and seventy-eight dollars.” And upon this verdict judgment was entered for the plaintiff for one hundred and seventy-eight dollars. A motion was made by the plaintiff to vacate this judgment and award him a writ of inquby to assess the value of the cotton. This motion was based upon the theory that, inasmuch as the value of the money paid for the cotton was not in issue by the pleadings, and was a matter with which the jury had no concern, so much of the finding as related to it was to be treated as surplusage, and the verdict regarded as a general finding for the plaintiff, with a failure to assess the damages to which he was entitled. This motion was overruled, but a subsequent motion by the plaintiff to set aside the verdict as being contrary to the law and evidence was sustained, and a new trial awarded. The new trial was had, and resulted in a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff made no motion to set aside this last verdict, nor were any excep
We think that the court below was right throughout. The verdict in question was manifestly erroneous, and based upon considerations which had no legitimate connection with the case. It was therefore properly set aside and a new trial awarded, but it cannot be regarded as a general finding for the plaintiff without indication on the part of the jury of the amount they intended to award. On the contrary, they quite clearly, though awkwardly, signify their estimate of the damages at one hundred and seventy-eight dollars. While it is manifest by their language that they based this estimate upon improper considerations, and therefore fixed upon an improper sum, it is equally evident that they did arrive at a conclusion, and did express their opinion as to what the amount should be. This being so, no part of it can be treated as a nullity, nor the whole of it as constituting a general finding for the plaintiff, without ascertainment of the sum due. Improper words can only be stricken from a verdict as surplusage, where those that remain constitute a perfect response to all the issues submitted. Traube v. State, 56 Miss. 153. The issues submitted here were, whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover, and, if so, how much. If we strike out the obnoxious words, there is no response whatever to the second question, and, while a writ of inquiry should be awarded when there is a failure to assess damages, it is not permissible, where the jury have made a finding, to strike it out, although clearly erroneous and based upon improper considerations, and produce, a result that was never intended, by preserving the balance of the verdict.
No motion for a new trial having been made, or exceptions taken to 'the verdict rendered for the defendant on the last trial, we are precluded from any consideration .of its correctness. Judgment affirmed.