4 So. 2d 333 | Fla. | 1941
The reader should refer to the reports for the history of this litigation, this being its fifth appearance here, twice upon writ of error (see Baker v. Peavy-Wilson Lumber Company,
It will be seen that this court formerly held, on the first occasion, that there was no error on the part of the trial court in disallowing the defendant's "plea as to presumption of the death of plaintiff's husband," one of the apparent reasons for granting the new trial. The capacity of the mother to sue for injury resulting from the loss of a son was recognized in circumstances where the father had deserted the family and had remained absent for a period of fourteen years. It was said that no abuse of discretion occurred in granting a new trial, the judge of the lower court having the conviction that justice demanded it and *298 the right was reserved to him to reverse his ruling if, "in the light of this [the Supreme Court's] opinion" he concluded that a new trial was not justified.
The court adhered to the original order granting the motion and the case was again submitted to the jury with the result that a verdict was found for the plaintiff.
Meanwhile a plea had been interposed before the second trial alleging that the father lived. Within the time allowed by law motion for new trial was again made and before the ruling on it, but after the time for filing an original motion had elapsed, an amendment was offered setting out that defendant could produce evidence establishing the existence of the father. After hearing the evidence lately found by the defendant the court granted the motion upon the ground presented by the amendment, as we interpret the record, which we, in the second appeal, decided to have been offered too late to be of any effect. As a consequence the order was reversed with directions to enter a judgment for the plaintiff"unless motion in arrest of judgment or for judgment nonobstante veredicto should be made and prevail." Final judgment was thereupon entered in favor of the plaintiff and it bore the recital that a motion in arrest of judgment and one for judgment non obstante veredicto had been denied.
The language we have italicized has given rise to the questions now confronting us.
It was our clear mandate that judgment be entered for the plaintiff, as was done, and it was equally certain that there should be one exception, namely, a favorable ruling by the trial court on a motion in arrest or for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. *299 To state it somewhat differently the errors, which plaintiff in error insisted were present in the record of the last trial had been reviewed and disposed of by us and nothing remains for our consideration in the present appeal except those matters which were reachable by the motions presented under our opinion and denied by the trial court.
The phraseology which we have stressed was not any indication of our views with reference to this particular controversy but was taken almost verbatim from the statute on the subject, 4615 C.G.L., 1927. An examination of this law will disclose that the appellate court is required, in the event of appeal from an order granting a new trial and reversal of it, to direct entry of judgment in the absence of a favorable ruling in an attempt to arrest or to secure judgment regardless of a contrary verdict.
A motion to arrest is one which can, according to numerous opinions of this court on the subject, among them Ball Brothers v. Holland,
The declaration and the plea were before this court when it reviewed the action of the judge in granting a new trial. The trial court apparently was not requested to rule upon the application for the substitution.
A motion for a new trial is not a part of the record proper (Holstun Son v. Embry,
It is apparent from a study of the law on the subject that at common law judgments non obstante veredicto were available only to plaintiffs. Professor Crandall, in his book on common-law practice, points out that such a judgment was one upon confession *301
where issue was formed upon a plea of confession and avoidance sufficient in the former element, insufficient in the latter. He wrote that whenever a plea was inept as a confession the remedy was by motion for repleader, but if the plaintiff's pleading did not support a verdict the defendant should move in arrest of judgment. This distinction seems particularly pertinent in view of the statute which we quoted at the outset of the opinion because we apprehend that the principal reason for its provisions that either motion might be made was to preserve until final action by the appellate court the right of making the motion appropriate to the unsuccessful party, whether plaintiff or defendant. This matter is treated thoroughly in a comparatively recent opinion by Mr. Justice BROWN, Dudley v. Harrison, McCready Co.,
In another of our decisions, Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Canady,
There it was said that this rule had not been changed except as it was affected by Sec. 4615, C.G.L., 1927, as construed by the court. A close examination of the facts set out in the opinion and the discussion of the court will reveal that a judgment in favor of the defendant was affirmed and that there was an explicit ruling that a judgment in favor of the defendant notwithstanding the verdict would have been improper "not only because there was evidence to support the plaintiff's declaration, but because a judgment of that kind is applicable,if at all in this state, where a plea setting up a meritorious defense has been fully sustained and not met by the plaintiff, or where the declaration fails to state a cause of action but a verdict is nevertheless found in favor *303 of the plaintiff" (italics supplied). In our research we have traced through the decisions of this court the recognition given to the common-law rule and we have noted the mention made of the exception. It may be that some confusion has been caused by reference to the pronouncement in Pillet v. Ershick,supra, especially when read in the light of what the court said in Dudley v. Harrison, McCready Co., supra. If any such uncertainty does exist we now announce that the common-law rule, unqualified, is in vogue in this state and that anything that has been written to the contrary is overruled.
We do not construe Sec. 4615, C.G.L., 1927, as affecting in anywise the scope and purpose of such motions and we feel that a cursory examination will show that it dealt only with the time that such motion should be made and the provision for them which should be included in an order of this court reversing a ruling on an order granting a new trial.
We are not unmindful of the case of Williams v. Hines,
Summarizing, motions in arrest of judgment and for judgmentnon obstante veredicto must be based on matters appearing on the face of the record; the latter is non available to the defendant in a case and in the instant controversy the circuit judge was correct when he denied the motions offered by the *304 defendant in the lower court and entered judgment, therefore, the judgment is affirmed.
BROWN, C. J., TERRELL, BUFORD and CHAPMAN, J. J., concur.