47 Mo. App. 257 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
The plaintiff, Mary Taylor, the wife of her coplaintiff, Joseph Taylor, sued the defendant in this action for personal injuries received by her through the alleged negligence of one of the defendant’s servants. On a trial before a jury she recovered a verdict for $2,500, which the court on the defendant’s motion set aside. From the judgment or order of the court sustaining the defendant’s motion for a new trial, the plaintiff has prosecuted this appeal, and has assigned this action of the court for error.
So far as we are advised, this is the first case to reach an appellate court under the recent amendment to the practice act, which permits a plaintiff to appeal from an order of the circuit court granting the defendant a new trial. The amendment engrafts upon, or rather injects into, appellate practice an entirely new feature; and before we proceed to the discussion of the present case we must so to speak, take our bearings and ascertain in what manner the questions presented
The amendment to section 2246, Revised Statutes, 1889 (Laws of 1891, p. 70), reads: “Any party to a suit aggrieved by any judgment of any circuit court, in any civil cause from which an appeal is not prohibited by the constitution, may take his appeal to the court having appellate jurisdiction from any order granting a new trial, or in arrest of judgment, or dissolving an injunction, or from any interlocutory judgment in actions of partition which determine the rights of parties, or from any final judgment in the case, or from any special order after final judgment in the cause ; but a failure to appeal from any action or decision of the court before final judgment shall not prejudice the right of the party so failing to have the action of the trial court reviewed on an appeal taken from the final judgment in the case.”
We find nothing in this amendment, or in its practical application, to warrant the conclusion that there must necessarily be any material change in the principles of appellate procedure. If the plaintiff secures , a verdict and the trial judge sets it aside, because in his opinion some incompetent evidence has been admitted
Section 2241, Revised Statutes, 1889, among other things, provides that “every order allowing a new trial shall specify of record the ground or grounds on which said new trial is granted.” In the present action the order sustaining the defendant’s motion is as follows : “ It is ordered by the court that the motion heretofore filed herein for a new trial be sustained, for
Now, if we must review the action of the court in the same way as if the motion for new trial had been overruled, and this, was the defendant’s appeal, we apprehend that the plaintiffs’ counsel would, not contend that the evidence was of such a character that we could reasonably reach the conclusion that the trial judge, in passing on the motion, acted arbitrarily, or with “unjudicial bias” as Judge'Philips puts it in the Whitsett case. In determining this question, we might look to the reasoning of the court, if the opinion of the court could become a part of the record by incorporating it in the bill of exceptions. This we cannot do, for the reason that the order sustaining the motion is the only matter of exception.
The plaintiff was injured by being run over and knocked down by a horse and wagon driven by a .boy, who at the time was in the service of the defendant. The real and vital question was, whether the accident occurred on account of the reckless driving of the boy,
The judgment of the circuit court sustaining the defendant’s motion for a new trial will be sustained, and the cause remanded to the circuit court for further trial.