The sole question on this appeal is whether the District Judge, having granted a new trial in a suit for personal injuries on the ground that the verdict in favor of the plaintiff was inadequate, should have lfinited the new trial to the issue of damages. Leroy V. Schuerholz, the plaintiff in the District Court, and a citizen of Maryland, brought suit against L. G-. Roach, a сitizen of Virginia, in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia, to recover damages for the loss of the sight of an eye. At the trial, the plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that the defendant, who was in the business of bottling soft drinks in Fredericksburg, had carelessly overcharged with carbonated gas a bottle of ginger ale which the plaintiff subsequently bought from a merchant to whom the defendant had sold it, and that when the plain *33 tiff was about to open the bottle on a roadsidе in Virginia, it exploded, causing the injury to his eye. The evidence of the defendant, on the other hand, tended to show that, while the plaintiff was attempting to opеn the bottle between two parts of the bumper of his automobile, a piece of glass flew up and struck him in the eye. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $625, whereupon he made a motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence as to the amount of damages sustained by him, аnd the District Judge, being of the opinion that the verdict was grossly inadequate, set it aside and awarded a new trial. The purpose and intent of the order, as shown by a statement of the judge accompanying it, was to provide for a new trial generally, putting the case in precisely the same position as it was befоre it was tried.
The jury had been instructed in substance by the District Judge that the plaintiff could not recover unless they should find that the accident happened through the nеgligence of the defendant in filling or charging the bottle improperly, and without any negligence on the part of the plaintiff in opening the bottle contributing to thе accident; and that if they should reach the conclusion that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, they should find a verdict in his favor in an amount sufficient to cоmpensate him for the injury. No exceptions were taken to the judge’s charge by either party. The plaintiff inferred from the verdict which followed that the issues оf negligence and contributory negligence had been decided in his favor, and so, after the new trial had been granted, and before the second jury was sworn, hе moved the court to limit the seeond trial to the sole issue of the amount of damages sustained; but the court overruled this motion. The second jury was then sworn, and, upon substantially the same evidence that had been introduced at the first trial, found a verdict for the defendant. The judgment on this verdict the plaintiff now seeks to-reverse, claiming that the liability of the defendant had been established at the first trial, and that it was improper to submit the question to the jury a second time.
The Supreme Cоurt of the United States in Gasoline Products Co. v. Champlin Refining Co.,
In Barnes v. Ashworth,
In Gasoline Products Co. v. Champlin Refining Co., supra, it was said (page 500 of
See, also, Norfolk Southern R. Co. v. Ferebee,
We are satisfied that in the pending easе the aetion of the District Court in granting a new trial generally was the only way in which justice could have been done. 'It is obvious, as the plaintiff contends and the District Judgе held, that the sum of $625 for the loss of an eye was grossly unjust and inadequate. It must have been so regarded by the very jurors who rendered the verdict, and it can give rise only tо the inference that it did not represent a fair estimate of the plaintiff’s loss, but merely a difference of opinion among the jurors as to the defendant’s liability and a compromise of the controversy at the expense of both litigants. Such a finding ought not to stand. It ought to be set aside not only as to damages, but as tо liability, for it speaks with no greater authority on the one subject than on the other. The precise question was met by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in the leading ease of Simmons v. Fish,
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
