The verdict was for six thousand dollars. The defendant below and plaintiff in error moved for a new trial upon these grounds:
(2.) That it is contrary to the evidence.
(3.) That it is strongly and decidedly against the weight ■qf evidence and the principles of justice and equity.
(4.) That it is without evidence to support it.
(5.) "That It is excessivfe. ' ■ '
This motion was amendéd because of-newly discovered evidence. ' -
At the hearing, the judge órdered a hew trial, unless the plaintiffs’would within five days write off from said verdict the sum "of two thousand dollars, leaving it to stand as if originally given for four thousand dollars; in which event the motion for a new trial was denied and refused. Within the time prescribed, the plaintiffs wrote off from the verdict two thousand dollars, and the new trial was thereupon refused. The errors assigned by the bill of exceptions are:
(1.) The refusal to grant the motion for a new trial.
(2.) In not granting the same without terms or conditions.
(3.) In not granting the same unconditionally, as prayed for, upon each and all the grounds of the motion and the amendments thereto.
Besides, the character of the witness, Dizor, by whom this new proof was to be made, was impeached by the affidavit of two persons, and although it was sustained by the affidavit of a single person, doubt was thereby cast upon his credibility. 57 Ga., 329, (5.)
That he had the power to grant the new trial because-the general damages or “ such as the law presumes to flow from any tortious act, and which may be recovered without proof of any amount,” (Code, §3070), was so excessive as to lead him to suspect bias or prejudice, is clear. Code, §§3067, 2947, and authorities there cited. But that he is authorized to fix the amount which the jury should have found may, under our decisions, and indeed under the express provisions of our Code, be well questioned. The language of the first of the above cited sections of the Code (3067), which prescribes the measure of damage where the entire injury is to the peace, happiness or feelings of the party, is that the “ verdict of the jury should not be disturbed, unless the court should suspect bias or prejudice from its excess or inadequacy; ” the language of the other section (2947) is still more explicit and imperative. “The question of damages being one for the jury, the court should not interfere, unless the damages.
There had been a finding of two thousand dollars in Duffield vs. Tobin,
The case of The Atlanta and West Point Railroad vs Venable,
Against this unbroken array of authorities, which might be greatly extended, we find nothing save a case or so in the later New York decisions, which give most excellent reasons against the conclusion they have reached, especially
The decision does not, we think, show, as was asserted by the superior court of New York, “ that the court may give the plaintiff the option to reduce his verdict to an amount which the court would not have deemed unreasonable or excessive,” but directly the contrary. The right of the jury to assess the damage was accorded in one case, while in the other it was denied. The power to control does not include the power to find. Like the executive veto, it arrests, but does not, by its exercise, bestow the power to enact. If the court in such a case may reduce
There are cases in England and in Massachusetts, in which verdicts in actions for injuries to property have been ¡set aside upon the ground of excessive or inadequate damages, and that question alone sent to another jury to assess ■the damages correctly, the remainder of the finding being ¡allowed to stand. 12 Peck., 279, 288; 17 Ib., 453, 461; 4 Taunt., 555. But it is believed that no case can be found where the circumstances of the entire transaction, as in this case, must be considered in determining the amount ■of the damages, where, upon the verdict being set aside on the ground of the excess or inadequacy of the damages ■found, and a new trial ordered, the reassessment of •damages was the only issue to be submitted to the jury .and they were prohibited from passing upon any other ■question. Such a course would withhold from the jury the means of effecting the very thing they are required to •do. In this very case one of the issues raised was, that the plaintiff’s negligence caused the injury of which she ■complained, or if it did not, then her own conduct contributed to it in such manner as to reduce the damages she might be entitled to recover. As suggested in the ■case from the 3 Sanford’s R., the course pursued here might be desirable, because it would often relieve the parties from the expense and delay of a new trial. The answer to such a suggestion is that neither the venerable -.sages of the common law nor the wisdom of the legislature deemed it prudent or safe to confide this power to the .judge. Without such authority, he has no jurisdiction or power to pass upon or determine questions which the law refers to the enlightened conscience of impartal jurors, and with which he is forbidden to interfere, except where the finding-leads him to suspect, or authorizes him to infer, that the verdict is the result of undue bias or prejudice. We are not to consider- what would be more convenient •or economical than the course marked out by the expres-s
We cannot say that there was error in the refusal of the court to grant the new trial upon the other grounds taken in the motion, and although the questions of law growing-out of the facts of the case have been elaborately and ably argued, we express no opinion upon them. The charge of the judge is not set out in the record, and as no-exceptions have been taken to it by either party, we are to presume that it laid down the law correctly. Therefore,, we direct that the judgment ordering the new trial be so-modified as to eliminate' therefrom the condition upon which it was granted, and that the relinquishment of the plaintiff made in pursuance thereof be annulled.
Judgment reversed.
