57 P. 634 | Or. | 1899
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
Under the statute (Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 235, subd. 6), the court is authorized to set aside a verdict and grant a new trial for “insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict or other decision, or that it is against law.” This statute does not appear to have received any direct construction by this court; but there are authorities elsewhere pertinent to the inquiry, and they leave no doubt but that, in passing upon the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, the trial court is authorized to weigh and consider all the evidence which has been submitted to the jury, and if it is ascertained that the verdict is against the clear weight thereof, or is one that is manifestly unjust, or that reasonable men would not adopt or return, to set it aside and grant a new trial. A similar statute has received express construction by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Metropolitan R. R. Co. v. Moore, 121 U. S. 558(7 Sup. Ct. 1334). It was there held that the language used in the statute, which gave a right to set aside the verdict for insufficient evidence, was not to be limited to its insufficiency in j>oint of law, but that it extended also to its insufficiency in point of fact. Such evidence is said to be insufficient in law only where there is a total absence of proof, either as to the quantity or kind, or from which no inference could be drawn in support of the fact sought to be established. But insufficiency in point of fact may exist where there is no insufficiency in point of law ; that is, there may be some evidence to sustain every element of the case, competent both in quantity and quality under the law, and yet it may be met by countervailing proof so potent and
The California statute is in the exact language of ours, 'and the courts of that state, from the time of their earliest cognizance of the statute, have construed it as conferring the power to weigh the evidence and determine its sufficiency; and that if, upon the whole, the judge is
It must be understood, of course, that a mere dissatis
Mr. Justice Brewer has laid down what seems to us to be the proper rule for the guidance of the trial judge, in Kansas Pac. Ry. Co. v. Kunhel, 17 Nan. 172. He says : “The one [the trial judge] has the same opportunity as the jury for forming a just estimate of the credence to be placed in the various witnesses, and, if it appears to him that the jury have found against the weight of evidence, it is his imperative duty to set the verdict aside. We do not mean that he is to substitute his own judgment in all cases for the judgment of the jury, for it is their province to settle questions of fact; and when the
We think the court in the case at bar proceeded upon an erroneous principle of law in limiting its inquiry to ascertaining whether there was any evidence from which the jury might infer the facts which were attempted to be proven. It should have gone further, and weighed the evidence in accordance with the principles herein-before enunciated: Larsen v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co., 19 Or. 240, 247 (23 Pac. 974); State v. Billings, 81 Iowa, 99 (46 N. W. 862); City of Tacoma v. Tacoma Light & Water Co., 16 Wash. 288 (47 Pac. 738); Hawkins v. Reichert, 28 Oal. 534; Dickey v. Davis, 39 Cal. 565; Bennett v. Hobro, 72 Cal. 178 (13 Pac. 473); Reid v. Young, 7 App. Div. 400 (39 N. Y: Supp. 899); First Nat. Bank v. Wood, 124 Mo. 72 (27 S. W. 554). The defendants were entitled to have their motion for a new trial passed upon in pursuance of correct principles of law, and, the trial court having failed in this, the cause will be remanded, with directions to determine the motion under the rules herein announced. The cumulative character of the newly-discovered evidence renders defendants’ position upon the first ground untenable; and, as it pertains to the second, viz., that the damages assessed are excessive, that was a matter within the dis