268 Mo. 225 | Mo. | 1916
— This in an original proceeding by certiorari, to bring up the record of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in the case of H. C. Smith, appellant, v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company, respondent, lately pending in that court, and wherein the
The facts in the case of Smith v. Railway are brief and these facts, together'with the action of the jury and the court nisi therein, are thus stated by the learned Kansas City Court of Appeals in their opinion now before ns:
“Plaintiff boarded defendant’s electric passenger car at Gower, Missouri, for the purpose of being carried as a passenger to St. Joseph in the same State, a distance of twenty miles. He did not have a ticket, stating that he had not time to purchase one after his arrival at the' station. The legal rate of fare was two cents per mile, and according to that rate he tendered the conductor forty cents for the full distance he wished to go. The conductor refused the offer and demanded sixty cents, which would be three cents per mile. Plaintiff refused to pay it and the conductor, in the presence of the passengers,' told him he would stop the car and put him off. Plaintiff persisting in his refusal, the conductor stopped the car, took plaintiff by the arm and led him to the door and put him off. After being put off he stated to the conductor that he was a deputy sheriff and he ‘would like to go on.’ The conductor replied with an oath that, he did not care who he was, he would not take him.
“Plaintiff brought an action for one thousand dollars compensatory and the same amount as punitive damages. A trial was had and a verdict returned for five dollars for the former and five hundred dollars for the latter. On motion for a new trial the court suggested that the punitive damages were excessive and that if plaintiff would remit four hundred dollars the motion for new trial would be overruled; if he did not it would*230 be sustained. Plaintiff refused and a new trial was thereupon granted.”
The Court of Appeals, as forecast above, held that the action of the court nisi in granting a new trial to defendant railroad, for the failure of plaintiff Smith to enter a remittitur therein, was wrong, and thereupon reversed and remanded the case with directions to the trial court to enter judgment on the verdict as returned by the jury. As reasons for its action in such behalf the Court of Appeals 'said:
“But defendant insists that instead of looking into the record to see if there was any evidence in plaintiff’s favor tending to support the verdict, we should endeavor to ascertain if there was any evidence in defendant’s favor tending to support the conclusion of the trial court that the verdict was excessive. It being conceded that if a trial court granted a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the' weight of the evidence an appellate court will only look to see if there is any substantial evidence supporting the courts’ order, defendant claims that there is no difference in that instance and the case at bar. It therefore claims that as there was substantial evidence in the record tending to show the punitive damages assessed by the jury were excessive, we should affirm the order granting a new trial.
“We think defendant misconceives both what the court did and what it had the power to do. In the first place the trial court did not grant a new trial to defendant because the court thought no case was made against it, or that there had ‘been any error in the trial. The court found that plaintiff had a case, both for compensatory and punitive damages, and would have overruled the motion for new trial except the court took upon itself the duty of measuring the punitive damages and in so doing found they were too much and that unless plaintiff would remit down to one hundred dollars, a new trial, would be granted. Plaintiff’s refusal to do*231 so was the sole ground and immediate cause of granting a new trial. Therefore, as we have said, there being substantial evidence to support the verdict, it should be allowed to stand, unless the trial court properly ordered it to be reduced.
“If there is evidence in a case which tends to support a verdict for punitive damages the court cannot interfere as to the amount except it be so disproportionate to the wrong committed by the defendant as to strike all reasonable men that the jury in fixing upon the sum found, have acted corruptly, or from passion and prejudice. It is a species of allowance made to the plaintiff not because it is his due, but as a punishment to the defendant and a deterring example to others. While a plaintiff has an absolute right to compensation for a wrong committed against him, he has no absolute right to demand that the defendant be also punished. The jury may inflict the punishment, but it is left absolutely with them. ’ ’
Relator contends that the judgment in said case of Smith v. Railway ought to be quashed and for naught held, for that it is contrary to the decision of this court in the case of McCloskey v. Publishing Co., 163 Mo. 22, and other cases ruled by us, which either expressly or tacitly followed the McCloskey ease.
Toward an ascertainment and discussion of this contention what we say below will be directed.
In a late case in Banc, Lyons v. Corder, 253 Mo. l. c. 561, Bond, J., properly and succinctly stated the trial court’s powers in these behalves thus:
“The law is well settled in this State, that where a trial judge exercises his discretionary power of setting aside a judgment on the ground ‘that it is against the weight of the evidence,’ his action in so doing will not be reviewed except upon a showing that no verdict in favor of the party to whom the new trial is granted would be allowed to stand. In which event, the exercise by the trial court of his power to grant a new trial although put upon a' discretionary ground, is deemed to be unjudicial, and it is the duty of this court to reverse his ruling in that respect. [Foley v. Harrison, 233 Mo. l. c. 507, 508; Smoot v. Kansas City, 194 Mo. l. c. 532; Casey v. Transit Co., 186 Mo. l. c. 232; Fitzjohn v. Transit Co., 183 Mo. l. c. 78, 79, 80.] ”
Generalizing thus for premises, we come to the only two points which we find it necessary to discuss, viz.: (a) what power, if any, has the trial court over a. verdict for punitive damages? and (b) does the determination of the excessiveness of such a verdict so far involve an examination into the weight of the evidence as to permit the full application of the well-settled rule above set out?
This rule does not in the last analysis differ so very greatly from the rule defining the power of the court to require the entry of a remittitur for excessiveness of a part of an award of compensatory damages, as a condition of the approval of the verdict. It is difficult to see any reason for any distinction, except the procedural one arising from the inherent difficulty of proving the fact of excessiveness. For compensatory damages are obviously more often capable of certain and exact determination than are punitive damages. Sometimes compensatory damages are determinable with mathematical accuracy; while punitive damages, being bottomed on the malice (express or implied), or on the wantonness, of the tortfeasor’s act, are always impossible of exact measurement and determination.
But be this as may be, the modern rule in this (Cook v. Globe Printing Co., 227 Mo. 471), as well as in a great majority of other jurisdictions, is trending toward the fixed view that trial and appellate courts have the same power of supervision over the one sort of damages as they have over the other sort. [8 R. C. L. 680, 681.] The differences are only in degree, growing out of difficulties met by the courts in exercising this power. [Sperry v. Hurd, 267 Mo. 628.]
In the late and most excellent compilation of the concensus of leading cases above cited, it is said upon this question:
“It is difficult to lay down any rule by which to test the question of excess in a verdict for'punitive or exemplary damages. At common law the amount was left almost entirely to the jury, and the courts generally refused to grant a new trial on the ground that*235 the award was excessive, and would do so only in a glaring case of outrageous damages, and which all mankind at first blush must think so. It is now generally held, however, that the jury is not at liberty, unrestrained, to award by way of punitive damages any amount, regardless of how large» it may be. While their verdict will not be set aside unless it is so large as to satisfy the court that it was not the result of an honest exercise of judgment, an award of exemplary damages is subject to revision by the court to the same extent as awards of compensatory damages, and will be set aside if it is grossly excessive or appears to be the result of passion or perjudice or improper sympathy. The court will not interfere except in extreme cases, however, and where it appears that an injustice has been done, and, perhaps, will proceed with more caution in such a case than where only compensatory damages are involved. ” [8 R. O. L. 680, 681.]
*236 “So we are of opinion, that the ground of excessive damages, as a reason why defendant should be granted a new trial, is covered by the second, third and fourth grounds of defendant’s motion for a new trial.
‘ ‘ The second ground asserts that there was no evidence whatever authorizing the verdict for compensatory damage, and that the verdict should have been for nominal damages only.
“The third ground asserts that there was no evidence whatever to support the verdict for punitive damages.
“That is, in both these grounds it is in effect declared that the verdict for compensatory, as well- also as for punitive damages, was excessive. It, therefore, logically follows that where the motion for a new trial asserts that the defendant was only entitled to nominal damages, that any damages- over and above nominal damages are excessive.
“So with the fourth ground, which asserts that the verdict was against the law and the evidence, it is clear that if the damages are excessive, the verdict was againt the evidence.
“While it is true that appellate courts are very slow to grant new trials solely upon the ground that verdicts are excessive, it is also true, that they defer very largely to the action of the trial courts with respect to such matters, and that a judgment is rarely ever reversed upon the ground of the unwarranted exercise of the power of such courts under such circumstances.
“But where it is manifest that a verdict is excessive, the court is remiss in its duty if it does- not, upon motion,-set it aside and grant a new trial, and this duty rests almost entirely within the province of the trial court, and this court will not interfere with the exercise of such discretion unless it appears to have been unreasonably or arbitrarily exercised.”
There may be evidence in the case of either much or little malice, or recklessness; all to be deduced from the quantum of the criminality, or from the insolence of manner and demeanor, or from the insulting words and acts of the tortfeasor, and the facts and circumstances of the case — the age, or sex, the health or lack of it, of the person wronged or injured; the weather prevailing and the time and place of the tort complained of; the persons present thereat, and the standing in affluence and influence of the doer of the tort. All these things, or any one or more of them, may be pertinent as evidence in the case. They are developed upon the trial in front of the trial judge, and he ought to be left by us as free to weigh them on the hearing of a motion for a new trial as he is to weigh any other fact or issue in the case? If any general criticism were pertinent it would seem to be that' as a rule the learned nisi prius judges exercise their great and inherent powers of control to prevent injustice too little, rather than too much.
It follows that in our opinion the trial court had the right to set this verdict aside on the ground that
Let the judgment of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in the case of Smith v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company be quashed and for naught held.