55 S.E. 528 | S.C. | 1906
October 11, 1906. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff recovered judgment for $4,999 on account of personal injuries alleged to have been received from falling into a hole defendant had dug on its right of way within a few feet of a path which was one of the main thoroughfares of the town of Fairfax, and along which plaintiff was walking in the night time, in ignorance of the existence of the hole. The complaint charged negligence, recklessness, wilfulness and wantonness on the part of the defendant as the proximate cause of the injury, in making the hole and allowing it to remain open and unprotected, when the defendant knew, or ought to have known, of the danger to those using the path. The appeal is from an order of the special Circuit Judge refusing a new trial.
The first point is that the plaintiff was not injured at a crossing or traveled place, or place where he had a right to be. There was evidence to the effect that the accident happened while plaintiff was walking in a path in general use by the public, and that he had no notice of the dangerous hole. The rule applicable to this branch of the case is thus stated in Matthews v. Railway Co.,
The defendant next submits that a new trial should have been granted because there was no support in the evidence for punitive damages. We should be very slow to grant a new trial on this ground, when there was no motion for nonsuit nor request to charge that the claim for punitive damages was entirely unsupported by the evidence. But, aside from this, it was for the jury to say on this issue also whether in view of all the circumstances the hole was so left open and insufficiently lighted, in close proximity to a frequented path, as to indicate reckless or wanton disregard of the safety of those who might use the path without notice of the danger. We do not say there was wantonness or recklessness on the part of the defendant, but there was evidence from which the jury might infer it, and, therefore, it was not error of law for the Circuit Judge to refuse a new trial on this ground. The first exception, therefore, must fail.
In the second and third exceptions, defendant submits a new trial should have been granted because the verdict was contrary to the preponderance of the evidence as to the fact of injury to the plaintiff, and as to contributory negligence. The mere preponderance of evidence against the verdict, as has often been held, does not warrant this Court in reversing a judgment of the Circuit Court refusing a new trial. Davis v. Southern Railway,
In the next place, it is insisted the verdict should have been set aside because the fact, that the finding was against the railroad company and not against its agent, who was directly responsible for the digging and proper guarding of the hole, shows that the verdict was due to prejudice or partiality; the evidence of negligence and wantonness being much stronger against him than against the railroad *294
company. There was no error of law in refusing the motion on this ground, because the liability of the railway company and Brinkley, its agents and co-defendant, was joint and several. Schumpert v. Railway and Hutchinson,
Lastly, the defendant contends the judgment should be set aside because the following language by the Circuit Judge in his decree refusing the motion for a new trial shows that he had an erroneous conception of his power to give relief against an unjust verdict by granting a new trial: "While a Judge has power under the law to set aside verdicts and grant new trials, this should never be done except in clear cases of abuse, or where it is manifest that the jury acted from prejudice or passion. It is a wise provision of law that vests the power in Judges to grant new trials; this power must rest somewhere, and the Judge who presides at the hearing is in a better position to understand the case and apply the evidence than any other person or tribunal. There being evidence to support the finding of the jury, I will not set aside the verdict." It tends to the promotion of justice that Circuit Judges should have a wide latitude in granting new trials absolutely, when the verdict is altogether wrong and new trials nisi when it is excessive. Indeed, the usefulness of trial by jury and the respect in which it is held depend in a great measure on the firm and independent exercise by the Circuit Judges of this power to set aside wrong verdicts, whether due to prejudice or mistake.
In this case, while the language above quoted and some other expressions in the decree seem rather strong in stating the limits of judicial discretion in granting new trials, yet when the whole context is taken altogether, it is obvious the Circuit Judge meant nothing more than a new trial should not be granted when the material facts are in dispute, unless the Court should be satisfied the verdict was unjust, and *295 that he was not so convinced of the injustice of this verdict as to warrant him in granting a new trial.
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.