Woodbury Co. v. Dougherty & Bryant Co.

161 Iowa 571 | Iowa | 1913

Deemer, J.

The issue was a narrow one, and the testimony was largely directed to this issue. The verdict was for defendant, and from an order sustaining a motion for a new trial, it appeals.

1. new trial This motion was bottomed upon nine distinct grounds, among which were the stereotyped ones, regarding the sufficiency of the testimony, both at law and under the instructions, to justify the verdict, and also certain alleged errors of the court in the giving and refusing to give certain instructions asked. The order sustained the motion generally, and if there be any tenable grounds upon which it might have been sustained, it will not be disturbed.

*5732. same: discretlon‘ The trial court is vested with a large discretion in passing upon motions for a new trial, and this discretion will not be interfered with, especially when a new trial is granted, unless it appears that there has been an abuse of this discretion. The reasons for this' rule have so many times been given, that it is needless to do more than cite some of the cases in support thereof: Dowey v. Railroad Co., 31 Iowa, 373; Royer v. Plaster Co., 147 Iowa, 277; Holland v. Kelly, 149 Iowa, 391.

3. same: granting of new trial: insufficiency of evidence Our reading of the record convinces us that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in setting this verdict aside, even if it were put upon the ground of the insufficiency of the testimony. In this regard a trial court exercises a somewhat different function than ... an appellate tribunal. A trial court is justified, indeed, it is its duty, to set aside a verdict which does not effectuate justice, although there may be a conflict in the testimony; and when this is done, appellate tribunals should be slow to interfere.

Defendant’s case was based largely upon engineers’ estimates which were uncertain, and which did not, in all cases, take into account the condition and carrying power of the building before the fire; while the testimony for plaintiff was more direct and certain and, in the opinion of the trial court, so manifestly preponderated over that offered for defendant that he might well have granted the motion on this ground alone.

II. The provision in the lease upon which defendant relied is as follows:

4. Same: land-L°ntdainstructi°n. Provided always, that in case the said premises or any part thereof, or the whole or any part of the building, of which they are a part, shall be taken for any street or other public use, or shall be destroyed or damaged by fire, or °ther unavoidable casualty, or by the action of the city or other authorities, after fhe execution hereof and before the expiration of the said *574term, then this lease and the said term shall terminate at the election of the lessor, or its successors or assigns, and such election may be made in case of any such taking notwithstanding the entire interest of the lessor or its successors or assigns, may have been divested by such taking, and if they shall not so elect, then in ease of any such taking or destruction of or damage to the demised premises, a just proportion of the rent therein before reserved, according to the nature and extent of the injuries sustained by the demised premises, shall be suspended or abated until the demised premises, or in case of such taking, what may remain thereof, shall have been put in proper condition for use and occupation.

The trial court, among other things, instructed as follows :

The lease provides, among other things, that in case the premises, or any part thereof, or the whole or any part of the building on said premises, shall be destroyed or damaged by fire, after the execution of said lease, and before the expiration of the term of the lease, then in case of any such destruction or damage to the premises, a just proportion of the rent reserved in said lease, according to the nature and extent of the injury sustained by the demised premises, shall be suspended or abated until the leased premises shall have been put in proper condition for use and occupation. The burden, therefore, rests, in the first place, upon the defendant to show the destruction or damage to the leased premises by fire, and the nature and extent of the injury sustained to the demised premises, so caused by fire, and that by reason of the damage done by the fire the premises were rendered unfit for use and ■occupation; if the defendant has shown this by a preponderance of the evidence, then the whole rent provided for in said lease would be suspended and abated, and no recovery had therefor until the demised premises had been put in proper condition for use and occupation, by the plaintiff; if the defendant has so shown, and you find from the evidence that the fire destroyed the building to such an extent as to render it unfit for use and occupation, the plaintiff cannot recover, unless you find that after the fire the plaintiff has put the said premises into such si condition as to make the same fit for use and occupation again by the defendant, and if the plaintiff *575has so shown by a preponderance of the evidence, then the plaintiff would be entitled to recover the rent provided in said lease from the time the same was so placed in proper condition for use and occupation up to and including the 15th day of this month.

This instruction was properly excepted to in the motion for a new trial, and we are disposed to think it was erroneous, or at least misleading, and that the motion might very well have been sustained on that ground.

It will be noticed that the lease does not provide for an entire abatement of the rent, but for a proportionate one, according to the nature and extent of the injuries sustained. The right of the plaintiff to recover a proportionate amount of the rent reserved, which, by the terms of its lease, plaintiff was entitled to was not presented to the jury, although such a request was made by the plaintiff in the instructions asked. True, the refusal to give these requests was not excepted to, but the matter was pointed out in the motion for a new trial, and we think the court might well have sustained the motion because of error in its instructions, or rather because of its failure to present the entire ease in a proper manner.

Upon either of the grounds, suggested, plaintiff’s motion might have been sustained by the trial court without abusing its discretion.

The order sustaining the motion is therefore sustained, and the decision is Affirmed.

Weaver, C. J., and Withrow and Preston, JJ., concurring. Gaynor, J., taking no part.
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