125 Cal. 652 | Cal. | 1899
This is an action for slander, wherein the p1aintiffs seek damages for injurious words spoken of the plaintiff, Julia C., in respect to her profession or occupation as a school teacher.
After suitable allegations in regard to the qualification and occupation of said Julia C., plaintiffs charge that while engaged in her profession, and while school was in session, defendant entered her schoolroom, and, in the hearing of the pupils, spoke willfully and maliciously to, of and concerning said plaintiff the following false and scandalous words: “You have no business to be in charge of young children. You are no more fit to teach school than hell is for a powder-house,” meaning, et cetera.
In another defense he alleges that he owns and occupies a farm adjoining the school lot, and the school children, through lack of proper control, have frequently committed depredations upon his property, and therefore he went to the teacher to complain and to request that she exercise some restraint over her pupils.
Plaintiffs recovered a verdict for one thousand dollars, which the trial judge, upon the motion for a new trial, adjudged to be excessive. The court then made an order granting a new trial unless plaintiffs would remit seven hundred dollars. This plaintiffs declined to remit and the order was made absolute.
The first question which naturally presents itself for consideration is whether this court can set aside the order on the ground that the court abused its discretion in ordering a new trial unless plaintiffs would remit a portion of their judgment. The power of the court to make a conditional order of this character is thoroughly settled in this state. (Gregg v. San Francisco etc. R. R. Co., 59 Cal. 312; Lee v. Southern Pac. Co., 101 Cal. 118; Domico v. Casassa, 101 Cal. 411.)
It is true that in actions for damages for a personal tort the court should not substitute its judgment for that of the jury. The judge should not grant a new trial merely because he deems the verdict excessive, unless it is so excessive as to indicate that it was the result of passion or prejudice. But the motion for a new trial was based, in part, upon the ground of excessive damages given under the influence of passion or prejudice. The court sustained this contention, holding that the damages were
From the testimony of Mrs. Sherwood the conduct of defendant certainly seems very offensive and boorish. His testimony, however, which the court must have believed, puts a different phase upon the matter. Manners are largely a matter of training and circumstance, and absence of decorum does not always imply malice or insult.
And the suit is not for an injury to the character and general reputation of Mrs. Sherwood. In her complaint she says that defendant meant to be and was understood to mean “that plaintiff was unreliable and unworthy of confidence as a teacher aforesaid, and in all respects in her profession was wholly disqualified for the exercise thereof.” Ho insinuation was made that she did not enjoy and deserve the highest reputation as a woman.
The trial was two years after the alleged slander, and Mrs. Sherwood testified that she had found no difficulty in obtaining schools in Lake county since. She might have continued at the same school. The judge probably concluded that she had not been seriously injured by the slander, and that the jury had simply imposed a fine on the defendant for his bad manners.
It is not necessary to discuss the other points made on the motion for a new trial. They are, however, all involved on this appeal, for the court cannot foreclose the defendant as to any of them by granting a new trial upon some one ground. Except where one ground is as to the insufficiency of the evidence, and this only as to the ruling upon that one point, it is utterly immaterial here upon what ground the new trial was granted. The respondent may defend the ruling upon any point involved in his motion.
The order is affirmed.
McFarland, J*., and Henshaw, J., concurred.