A single question is presented on this appeal, namely, whether a plaintiff who exercises an option given under the
Powers
rule to accept a reduced amount of damages in lieu of a new trial is entitled to interest from the date of the verdict on such reduced amount.
Powers v. Allstate Ins. Co.
(1960), 10 Wis. (2d) 78,
Interest on the amount of a verdict from its date is includable in the judgment as an item of costs under sec. 271.04 (4), Stats., which provides, “When the judgment is for the recovery of money, interest at the legal rate from the time of verdict, decision or report until judgment is entered shall be computed by the clerk and added to the costs.” We think the option granted under the Powers rule is in the nature of a remittitur of an excess amount of the verdict and the plaintiff is entitled to interest on the verdict so reduced. The reduced verdict then is the foundation for the judgment. The defendant *620 argues the option under the Powers rule is in the nature of a substitution for the excessive verdict which is set aside and the amount fixed by the court is in lieu thereof. Hence, the amount fixed by the court does not qualify as a verdict, decision or report under sec. 271.04 (4).
Prior to our decision in
Powers v. Allstate Ins. Co., supra,
and from early times, the exercise of the court’s power over an excessive verdict was on the theory and in terms of correcting the verdict. On the ground of public policy to avoid relitigation, the court gave to the plaintiff the option to remit the excess of the verdict over an amount the court decided the plaintiff was entitled to have and, if the plaintiff agreed to accept that amount, the verdict was ordered to stand for the reduced amount and judgment was entered thereon. This procedure called for the plaintiff to file a remittitur whereby he remitted the excess of the verdict over the amount set by the court in the option.
Corcoran v. Harran
(1882),
The plaintiff relies for his right to tax interest on the reduced amount of the verdict upon
Waterman v. Chicago & A. R. Co.
(1892),
In
McLimans v. Lancaster
(1886),
The plaintiff attempts to distinguish these cases on the ground the verdict was not set aside as it was in the instant case. In contrast to these cases stands
Lehman v. Amsterdam Coffee Co.
(1912),
We think for the purpose of interest it does not make any difference how the option is framed under the
Powers
rule,
i.e.,
whether in the preferable form of requiring a remittitur of the excess of the verdict over the amount set by the court or couched in language of accepting or taking a judgment for a reduced amount. The nature of the judicial process is the same. It is the
*622
correction of the verdict through its reduction by the consent of the plaintiff so that a judgment can be grounded upon a nonexcessive verdict. There is no doubt that where a verdict is not the basis of the judgment, interest cannot be taxed from the date of such verdict. Thus where a new trial is granted and the verdict is set aside and a second verdict is secured, interest can run only from the second verdict.
Wendt v. Fintch
(1940),
In Powers v. Allstate Ins. Co., supra, we referred to the power of the court to correct excessive verdicts by the use of remittiturs and cited for such procedure Correction of Damage Verdicts by Remittitur and Additur, 44 Yale Law Journal (1934), 318; Remittiturs and Additurs, 49 West Virginia Law Quarterly (1942), 1; and annotations in 53 A. L. R. 779 and 95 A. L. R. 1163. 1 In changing the rule in respect to the determination of the amount of the remittitur, we stated, “plaintiff should be granted the option of remitting the excess over and above such sum as the court shall determine is the reasonable amount of plaintiff’s damages, or of having a new trial on the issue of damages.” 10 Wis. (2d) at page 92. The traditional way of handling the option was to grant the option to the plaintiff to file a remittitur and if this was done to deny the defendant’s motion for a new trial. However, this procedure was not always followed and questions arose as to the appealability of the various forms of orders made under the Powers rule.
*623
In
Lucas v. State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co.
(1962), 17 Wis. (2d) 568,
We think the defendant’s argument that the verdict in the instant case was set aside and therefore there is no foundation for interest stresses too much. As a matter of form, the verdict was set aside at least twice. Such procedure was formalistic and not of substance. We do not think the plaintiff’s right to interest should be denied because of the setting aside of an excessive verdict which is conditional in nature when an option is given under the Powers rule. The basis for the judgment in this case was the verdict modified in effect, if not in form, by the exercise of the option and as such carries interest under sec. 271.04 (4), Stats.
*624 By the Court. — That part of the order appealed from is reversed with directions to include in the judgment interest on the reduced amount of the verdict as provided in sec. 271.04 (4), Stats.
Notes
See also Remittiturs and Additurs in Personal Injury and Wrongful Death Cases, 1964 Personal Injury Commentator, 71.
