5 Ga. App. 402 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
Miller sued the railway company for damages resulting from a negligent injury, in which both of his legs were cut •off. He recovered a verdict of $25,000, which the trial judge expressly approved, as being, in his opinion, not excessive under the circumstances. In this court it was practically conceded that the evidence was such as to authorize the jury to find that the defendant was negligent, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover in some amount, the chief insistence being that the verdict is excessive. At the time of the injury the plaintiff was twenty-on.e years old, was a locomotive fireman, and was earning $1.75 per day. He experienced great pain and suffering.
The power of this court to set aside a verdict on the ground that it is excessive is contained in, and is limited by, section 3803 ■of the Civil Code, which reads as follows: “The question of damages being one for the jury, the court should not interfere, unless the damages are either so small or so excessive as to justify the inference of gross mistake or undue bias.” This is a different power from that exercised by the judge of the trial court in reviewing the verdict on a motion for a new trial. Holland v. Williams, 3 Ga. App. 636 (60 S. E. 331). In cases such as this, the ■amount of the damages is to be determined solely (except so far as the trial judge has power to review the verdict) by the enlightened conscience of the jurors trying the case, provided only that they are impartial and that they have not acted under some gross mistake. The presumption is that the jurors were impartial and that they ■ understood the case before them. If the verdict is so large that either by the very size alone, or by the size taken in connection with the other circumstances appearing, the reviewing court is justified in saying the jury was not impartial or the verdict was induced by a mistake, the presumption is overcome, and the verdict is set aside; for, of course, a verdict rendered by a prejudiced jury, or by a fair jury as the result of a mistake, is not a legal ■verdict.
The question is, how is this bias or this mistake to be shown? Sometimes it may be shown directly, but this is rarely so. Hsually it is a matter of inference; and in that event the solution falls ■within the rule as to circumstantial evidence, — there must be no
In our adoption of the common law and in our adaptation of it to our judicial system, we have applied these principles to the right of our courts of final review to' grant new trials for excessiveness in verdicts. The code section (3803) is merely declaratory. These courts — the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court — have the power, but must not exercise it unless the verdict is shown to be
Many American courts, in testing verdicts for excessiveness, have-compared them with. verdicts rendered by juries in similar cases. See Standard Oil Co. v. Tierny, 92 Ky. 367 (17 S. W. 1025, 14 L. R. A. 677, 36 Am. St. R. 595), s. c. 96 Ky. 92 (27 S. W. 983); Lockwood v. Street R. Co., 15 Daly (N. Y.), 374 (7 N. Y. Supp. 663). The fact that a verdict is greatly larger in amount than the sums fixed usually by juries in similar eases is evidentiary as. to bias or mistake, but is not conclusive.
If the verdict is very large, and it appears that on the triaL there was some slightly erroneous action which was trifling enough, to be considered ordinarily as harmless, but which might have misled the jury or have given them a biased or' an erroneous conception of the case, the court will, with little reluctance, set the verdict: aside. The size of the verdict being itself a circumstance which suggests the possibility of bias or mistake, the reviewing court: scans the record closely, to see if this suspicion finds corroboration in any cause that might have induced such a result. Ransone v. Christian, 49 Ga. 491; Western & A. R. Co. v. Young, 83 Ga. 512 (2), 516 (10 S. E. 197). The Supreme Court and this court have both frequently applied this principle, and it is thoroughly familiar to the bar. In the Young case, just cited, there is an oft-quoted obiter by the greatest master of judicial logic this State has ever known (Judge Bleckley, of course), which is, nevertheless,, so palpably fallacious as to justify even a‘judicial tyro, such as Ir to comment upon it. His statement is as follows: “In the absolute sense, damages equivalent to all the assets of the railroad company might not be excessive, nor even adequate, for a serious personal injury resulting from its negligence, but in any practical sense, the damages in each case must be graduated so that there-may be railroads left in existence, and so that all like injuries occasioned by their use may be compensated in some, reasonable degree. For a few injured persons to recover amounts not so graduated would perhaps in the end leave nothing with which to com
We have scanned the record before us with care. The trial was lengthy, the evidence was voluminous; and yet there is not a single exception taken either to the admission or the rejection of testimony. There are a few exceptions to the charge of the court, but none of them are meritorious. The charge was full, fair, and comprehensive. Nothing, save only the size of the verdict itself, suggests the slightest possibility of the introduction of bias or mistake into the jury box. On the hearing of the motion for a new trial, the whole record was before the trial judge; and, not merely by that implied approval which would arise from the act of refusing" the motion, but in an opinion filed, he has expressed himself as being satisfied that the verdict is not too large. The jury saw the plaintiff, heard his agonies described, probably considered, as they had the right to consider, that he would suffer in the future and would endure “mortification and anguish' . . by reason of the mutilation of his body and the fact that he may become an
Judgment affirmed.