Plaintiff-appellant has filed here his-“Motion to Amend and Particularize the Mandate with Respect to" Statutory Interest on the Verdict and Judgment Reinstated on Appeal Herein.”
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In this case the plaintiff-appellant had verdict and judgment for $35,000 on May 24, 1952/ The trial court sustained defendant-respondent’s motion for new trial. Plaintiff appealed from this order. We held in the opinion filed July 12, 1954,
The present verified motion, filed November 3, 1954, recites that upon receipt of the mandate, the trial court entered its order reinstating plaintiff’s verdict and judgment “in accordance with the mandate of the supreme court”, and refused to include any provision in the order with respect to interest. Plaintiff’s motion recites further that defendant paid to the circuit clerk the principal of the judgment and costs, refused to pay interest from May 24, 1952 (the date of the judgment), and contends that the mandate means that interest begins to be due from the date on which the circuit court made its order reinstating plaintiff’s verdict and judgment.
We think our mandate is clear and unambiguous and that there can be no question that under that mandate plaintiff’s verdict and judgment were “reinstated” as of May 24, 1952, the date on which the judgment was rendered. When this court held that the order of the trial court setting aside the verdict and judgment was an erroneous order, the effect was to hold that the judgment was in fact never effectively. lost but always in fact existed. The effect of our opinion and mandate was in reality to affirm the judgment as entered on May 24, 1952. And, of course, a judgment bears interest from the date of rendition. We are of the opinion that the case of Scullin v. Wabash R. Co.,
However, while we have the judicial power to recall a mandate for certain purposes, it would be useless to do so under the circumstances here because the mandate conforms to the final opinion. Therefore, plaintiff-appellant’s motion is overruled.
