8 Mo. 633 | Mo. | 1844
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by George W. Samuel et ah, against Benjamin R. Morton, before a justice of the peace, and the judgment of the justice was in favor"
The cause being removed to the Circuit Court, the plaintiffs, Samuel et al., had a judgment rendered in their favor.
The Circuit Court, on the motion of the defendant, granted a new trial. On the second trial, the defendant obtained a judgment in his favor.
On the trial of the cause, the following testimony appears, from the bill of exceptions, to have been before the jury:- — -James S. Thomas, a witness, stated, that some time in the beginning of the year 1841, the plaintiffs placed in the hands of the witness, for collection, a note or bond against the defendant and one Michael Byrd, for $600, dated some time about the middle of June, 1839, and due some time in the fall of the year 1841, with interest fromsthe date at the rate of ten per centum per annum; that the defendant made several payments along in the summer and fall of 1841, which were credited on the note or bond; the last payment was made in September, 1841, when the defendant paid to the witness the balance of the principal and interest, as the witness then thought, and he gave up the note or bond- to the defendant, who took it away with him; that nothing piore was said betwixt the witness and defendant about the debt until some time in January or February, 1842, when the witness was told by one of the plaintiffs, whilst making a settlement with him, and whilst the plaintiff was making the entry in his books of the moneys received by the witness, that he (the witness) bad made a mistake, and had not received enough interest, having received only $68 19-100 interest. The witness, then, referring to the books of the plaintiff, found that, according to the books, he had made a mistake of one year’s interest. The witness mentioned the mistake to the defendant, who admitted the date of the note, and that it bore ten per cent, interest per year from the date, but stated that the note was lost, and not admitting the mistake charged by the witness. This witness, on a cross-examination, stated, that on a former trial, it is very probable, though he is not certain, he testified, that whilst he was calculating the interest on the bond or note, the defendant called his attention to a mistake in the defendant’s favor of ten or twelve dollars.
The defendant then produced two witnesses, who testified, that, on a former trial of this cause, they had heard the witness for plaintiff, whilst testifying, state, that the defendant had called his attention to a mistake, made by him in the defendant’s favor, of ten or twelve dollars.
This was, all the evidence given on this trial, but on the former trial much other evidence was given, and as the history of both trials before the Circuit Court is sent up on this record, the' counsel for the plaintiff has thought proper, on the .last trial, to pray instructions, based not only on the evidence given on the last trial, but also instructions based on the evidence given on the first trial, but not given on the last; all of which, however, were given.
Other instructions were given by the eourt, at the prayer of the defendant, and exceptions were taken; but as the appellants, in their assignment of errors, confine themselves to the errors charged to have been committed by the court—
1st, In granting the defendant a new trial;
1. In Davis vs. Davis, 8 Mo. Rep., 56, it was decided, that where the Circuit Court improperly grants a new trial, and the party complaining wishes to avail himself of the error committed by the court, he should tender his bill of exceptions, and abandon his case at that point. As it was the plaintiff here who was dissatisfied, he might have suffered a nonsuit after the court had decided against him, and then have moved to set it aside for reasons properly preserved in a bill of exceptions: but he did not elect this method, and has chosen to await the issue of another trial; if that had have been successful for him, nothing more would have been heard of the errors now charged to have been committed by the court in setting aside the first verdict, and granting the new trial: but, having the choice of two remedies, he has elected one; he has tried the cause the second time in the Circuit Court, and the judgment of that court being given against him, it must stand, unless some error appears on the record. This brings us to the second error assigned.
2. Was the verdict in the case against the evidence given ? It does not appear that any evidence offered by the plaintiff was excluded by the Circuit Court; he abandons all claim to any relief on account of the instructions given by the court, as he well might, for the court had given all he asked, and, as above observed, he had asked several for which he had laid no foundation in the evidence offered on the last trial; and the jury were left to judge, from the testimony of the plaintiff’s own witness, whether all the interest on the note or bond (as it is called) has been paid. In Singleton vs. Man, 3 Mo. Rep., 467, (top-paging, 328,) the late Judge McGirk, delivering the opinion of the court, said : “When we see the testimony is stronger against the verdict than it is for it, still that is not any reason why we should interfere: it should strongly preponderate,” &c. Again, in Oldham vs. Henderson, the same judge says — “As to the question whether the court ought to have granted a new trial, we are of opinion, that the court did right to refuse it. It is only in those cases where the Circuit Court clearly erred, that this Court ought to interfere,” &c.- — See 4 Mo. Rep., 301: to the same purpose, see Martin vs. Withington. In this last case, the verdict was found by the Circuit Court, silting as a jury. (4 Mo. Rep., 521.) See, to the same purpose, Mulliken vs. Greer, 489, and Steel vs. McCutchen, 522, of 5 Mo. Rep., and Dooly and Kirtland vs. Jennings, 6 Mo. Rep., 61.
No relaxation of this rule has ever been allowed by this Court to the present time. In the case now before the Court, the plaintiff’s witness stated, that with the note before his eyes he calculated the interest due, and surrendered the note, after receiving, as he then thought, the amount of the principal and interest; but some months afterwards, perceiving that he had not entered on his books as much to the credit of that note as he thinks he ought to have received, he is induced to believe he made a mistake against the interest of the plaintiff. But the jury had the testimony before them with instructions, which we must now regard as