81 Minn. 312 | Minn. | 1900
The object of this action is to determine the boundary line between the adjoining farms of the respective parties. The cause was tried in the court below before a jury, and a verdict returned which
“Ordered, that such motion be, and the same hereby is, granted unless the plaintiff shall * * * file * * a stipulation consenting that the verdict as returned by the jury be altered and amended so that where it now reads, 'thence east to Lake Elysian, to a point thirty feet south of the east end of said fence/ it shall read, 'thence east to Lake Elysian, to a point twenty-six links south of the east end of said fence/ and that, if such stipulation be so filed, the motion for a new trial be denied.”
The plaintiffs accepted the terms of the order, filed the stipulation consenting to the modification of the verdict, and defendant appeals.
It appears from the order appealed from that the court below was of the opinion that the verdict was unsupported by the evidence. An examination of the evidence contained in the record satisfies us that the court was right in that conclusion. Though there may be some evidence to support the jury, the great weight of evidence is against their conclusion. The court was therefore right in granting a new trial. It should, however, have been granted absolutely, and not conditioned upon plaintiffs’ consent to an amendment of the verdict. The effort of the learned trial judge to induce the parties to cease quarreling over a matter of no great pecuniary consequence to either was worthy their serious consideration, though he adopted means to that end not strictly justified as a matter of law. He had no power to amend the verdict to the extent covered by the order.
Although the right of the court to amend and correct verdicts as to matters of form, and perhaps, in instances, as to substance, is generally recognized and upheld, such right is limited to such amendments and corrections as tend to make the verdict conform to the intention of the jury. The fundamental law of the land will not sanction or warrant the exercise of such right for any other purpose. The court cannot in- any case substitute its conclusions upon questions of fact for those found by the jury. 2 Thompson, Trials, §
The verdict as returned by the jury fixed and established the boundary line in dispute, definitely and particularly describing it. The line fixed by the court is a distinct departure from that found by the jury, and is a substitution of the conclusions reached by the court, from its view of the evidence, for those of the jury. Defendant cannot be compelled or required to submit to the substituted verdict, and the order appealed from cannot be sustained. And as it appears therefrom, and from the record as well, that the verdict of the jury is not sustained by the evidence, a new trial must be granted.
Order reversed and a new trial granted.