The appellee moves to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the notice of appeal is taken from a judgment entered on August 2, 1967, and that the record discloses there was no judgment rendered on that date; that the only ruling of the trial court made on August 2, 1967, was an order overruling the appellant’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. This court has held that such a ruling is a judgment from which a direct appeal will lie.
Shetzen v. C. G. Aycock Realty Co.,
That the judgment overruling the motion in the present case recites that it is an order is of no legal consequence. The effect of a judicial act and not the judge’s characterization of it determines its nature as “a judgment” as distinguished from “an order of the court.” The motion to dismiss is without merit.
Where in a suit upon a contract the evidence submitted on behalf of the parties affirmatively reveals the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, the defendant’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict is the appropriate remedy to set the verdict aside.
The question on which the decision of the present case turns is whether the evidence adduced upon the trial showed the parol contract sued upon to be an enforceable agreement. Assent of the parties to the terms of the contract and a consideration for the performance of the same are essential requisites to its validity. Where either of these elements is lacking the contract is not binding or enforceable. Code § 20-107.
The plaintiff, under the terms of the parol agreement, assumed no obligation or duty that he was not bound to perform under the written contract he had previously entered into with the defendant. Under both the written contract and the oral agreement the defendant assumed the obligation to erect and properly place the same number of trusses to support the decking for the roof pf the building.
The Supreme Court held in
Johnson v. Hinson,
It should be noted that the cause of the trusses’ falling was unexplained and there was no evidence that their collapse was due to defendant’s fault or any deficiency in the specifications as to how the trusses were to be erected.
The evidence having demanded a finding that there was no consideration for the parol agreement, the trial judge erred in overruling the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Judgment reversed.
