216 N.W. 854 | S.D. | 1927
Plaintiff brought this action for damages to his automobile in the amount of $52.05 suffered in a collision claimed to have been due to the negligence of the defendant Mrs. H. A. Gilham. Defendant Mrs. H. A. Gilham answered, admitting the collision, but counterclaimed upon the ground that it was the fault of plaintiff and asked the sum of $45 for damages to her car in the collision. The case was tried to a jury, who returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for damages in the amount of $1.04. Thereupon the plaintiff moved: the trial court to amend and correct the verdict by changing the amount of damages therein found from $1.04 to $5,2.50, plus interest. This motion was duly brought on for hearing, and pursuant thereto the learned trial judge did so amend the verdict by the making of the following order;
“And the plaintiff having made a motion to the court asking that the verdict in the above-entitled matter be corrected according to the undisputed evidence and the specific instructions of the court, and it appearing that the amount of damages asked for by the plaintiff was in the sum of $52.50 and that said amount of damages was undisputed at the trial of the aforesaid case, and it further appearing that the defendants H. A. Gilham and Mirs. H. A. Gilham have put in a counterclaim for damages against the plaintiff in the sum of $45, and it appearing further that the court having instructed the jury that if they found for the plaintiff they
“Dated this 3d day of October, A. D. 1925.
“By the Court:
“Ransom L. Gibbs, Judge.”
Upon the verdict as so amended judgment was entered for plaintiff in the amount of $53.80 damages, together with costs from' which judgment and the order denying their motion for new trial defendants have appealed, raising by apt assignments of error the question of the power of the court to make and enter its order of October 3d amending the verdict.
Granting that the trial court may properly have instructed the jury if -they found for respondent in any amount to assess the damages at $52.05, and granting further that the verdict of the jury was in utter and willful disregard of the instructions, yet it was the verdict of the jury. 'Perhaps the trial court might have refused to receive it and ordered the jury to go back and
The learned trial judge by his order of October 3d in effect substituted his verdict for the verdict of the j'ury. This he had no right or authority to do. If the record in the entire case .were such that the trial court would have been justified in the first instance in directing a verdict for respondent in the amount of $52.05, doubtless the entry of the order of October 3d would not have been prejudicial to the appellants however erroneous it may have been. See Schweitzer v. Connor, 57 Wis. 177, 14 N. W. 922.
No statement of the evidence is set out in the briefs on this appeal, so we are unable to say from an examination thereof whether a directed verdict for respondent in the amount prayed for in his complaint would have been proper in the first instance, and we are not able to indulge such a presumption in view of the fact that it affirmatively appears that the order of October 3d was not made upon any such theory. From the fact of submission to the jury and from the recitals of the order of October 3d, it ap
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to enter judgment pursuant to the actual verdict of the jury.