The present suit is one for personal injuries. The trial court entered judgment in favor of plaintiff and against both defendants for $31,750 “for personal injuries” and $1,000 “as property damage,” upon the purported verdict of a jury. The legal sufficiency of that verdict is the principal question raised here. A very brief statement of the facts will suffice.
Plaintiff, accompanied by a passenger, was driving his Ford pickup truck west along the north half of Guinotte Avenue in Kansas City at about 4:45 on the afternoon of April 9, 1959; he had slowed almost to a stop, or perhaps had stopped, in order to make a left turn into the driveway of a filling station on the south side of the street; he was in the inside lane of the north half of the four-lane street, waiting for the oncoming traffic to clear. He testified that his left turn signal was operating and had been so operating for nearly half a block, and that his stop was gradual. Defendant Thorne, driving a tractor trailer unit with a sixteen-ton load behind plaintiff and in the same direction, ran into the rear of plaintiff’s vehicle and knocked it across the center line of the street into a head-on collision with an oncoming car. It is conceded that the defendant Thorne was acting as an agent for the other defendant. The identity of the surnames of plaintiff and the individual defendant is purely coincidental. Defendants were charged with negligence in sundry respects, including negligent lookout, negligent speed and a negligent failure to stop, slow or swerve so as to avoid the collision. Defendants do not claim here that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case. Contributory negligence was an issue at the trial, but that question is in no way involved here.
Plaintiff suffered very severe injuries, consisting principally of fractures of the
The jury was instructed very fully on the issues of negligence pro and con, and on the matter of damages. No objections are made here to any of the instructions. The jury was also given an instruction (No. 11) containing several forms of verdict; all of those in plaintiff’s favor began with the words: “We, the jury find the issues for plaintiff * * ⅜ ”; and they concluded with the words: “and do assess his damages at $-.” The forms so given distinguished between damages for personal injuries and property loss and permitted separate assessments for either or both. This instruction further told the jury that its verdict “should be written on a separate paper, and not on one of these instructions.” After deliberating, the jury returned to the court a sheet of paper containing the following words and figures: “Persnal injuris $31,750.00 Damages $1000.00.” Below this writing appeared the signatures of ten jurors. When the court received this paper it read the quoted words and figures aloud, asking the foreman whether the first amount was $31,150; the foreman replied that it was "seven hundred.” At that point the following further colloquy ensued : “The Court: ‘— $750.00. Damages $1,000.00.’ Do you mean by ‘damages’ property damage? The Foreman: Yes. The Court: I am going to write in here in the presence of the jury ‘property damage’, then have counsel look at it. This is signed by ten jurors, is that correct, Mr. Foreman? The Foreman: Yes, sir. The Court: Now, is that the verdict of the ten who signed this verdict? (Jurors indicate affirmatively.)” The court wrote the word “property” on this paper, before the word “damages.” Following the above the transcript notes — “Jury Excused.” There is nothing in the record to indicate that counsel for either party had seen the paper up to this point.
Thereupon a colloquy ensued between court and counsel, and at that point counsel for defendants moved that the purported verdict be stricken and a mistrial declared, for the reasons: that on its face it was improper, that the jury had not followed the court’s instructions, that it had not “found the issues” for plaintiff and against the defendants, that it had made no finding with regard to the negligence of the defendants’ or plaintiff’s contributory negligence, that the paper “is an estimate generally of some sort” and that it did not constitute a verdict of the jury. As a matter of clarity, we note here that these objections were fairly preserved in defendants’ motion for a new trial, about which no question is raised.
At this point the court stated to counsel that the foreman had signed his name on the first verdict form on Instruction No. 11. That particular form contained separate specific findings of the issues for plaintiff on his claims for personal injuries and property damages, with blank spaces for the assessment of ,an amount as damages on each. No signature appears on the typed Instruction as contained in our record nor is there any other reproduction of the form in the record, but, of course, we take the court’s statement to be true. There ensued some further colloquy, the court indicating that it felt that it was clear that the “verdict” amounted to a finding for plaintiff on both “personal and property damage,” and that “the Court could have corrected the form of the verdict here in the presence of counsel and the jury or could have sent the jury back to the jury room to rewrite the verdict.” At the conclusion of this presentation the court overruled defendants’ motion to strike and for a mistrial. No effort was made to call the jury back or to correct the “verdict” further; and judgment was entered as already indicated. At the hearing on defendants’ after-
We have been cited to no case involving a situation like this one, nor have we found any in our own research. We note first, therefore, the principles generally held applicable where defective verdicts have been presented. A verdict is the sole basis of the judgment to be entered in a jury case and if it is not sufficient to sustain the judgment, the latter is void. Spangler-Bowers v. Benton,
Section 510.230 RSMo 1959, V.A. M.R. and Rule 71.02 of this court, V.A.M.R. provide that in “every issue for the recovery of money only, * * * the jury shall render a general verdict.” Essentially, a general verdict is a finding or pronouncement by the jury on all the issues submitted to it, including, of course, the issue of damages, if appropriate. Will v. Hughes et al.,
In numerous cases affidavits of jurors, when offered in support of the verdict, have been considered in order to explain an ambiguity or to clarify the
We have determined that here there was no verdict, and that the court erred in entering judgment. The court should have called the deficiency to the attention of the jury and required it to follow the instructions and the verdict forms. It failed to do so. In Singleton, supra (157 S.W. at loc. cit. 966) the court said: “It is such an easy matter to call the jury’s attention to the ambiguity in the verdict at the time it is returned, and have it corrected and made absolutely definite and certain before the jury is discharged, that no room ought to be given for the rule that an uncertain or ambiguous verdict can be received and recorded, and then helped out by judicial construction when judgment is to be rendered upon it. As said in Newton v. St. Louis Railroad, [
It is urged here that the plaintiff’s verdict form (as contained in original Instruction No. 11) signed by the foreman, should supply any deficiency. It is true that it has been held, at least once, that a valid verdict may consist of two separate pieces of paper. U. S. Water & Steam Supply Co. v. Jacobia,
As corrected, the supposed verdict contained the statement “Property Damages $1000.” In plaintiff’s amended petition he alleged that his property damage was $1200; in his deposition, as referred to at the trial, he had apparently estimated the damage at that figure. At the trial, however, he testified that he was then asking only $700 on that item and that he had
reduced
the claim to that figure. The jury wholly disregarded this testimony. It is true that in some cases, as counsel argue, a jury may decide as between conflicting testimony in a party’s deposition and at trial, Moore v. Ready Mixed Concrete Co., Mo.,
Finally, plaintiff urges that defendants’ counsel waived the insufficiency of the purported verdict by not protesting at the time it was read and before the jury was discharged. They cite Riley v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo.App.,
For the reasons stated, we find that the verdict was wholly insufficient and that the court committed error in entering judgment upon it. In view of the foregoing it is unnecessary to consider the further point made of alleged prejudicial errors occurring during the final arguments.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for retrial.
