The appellee brought suit on the common counts in assumpsit to recover for goods bargained and sold to the defendant, and filed with the declaration an account showing the balance due to be $154.82. At the trial of the case in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for "$154.82 and interest," and thereupon *Page 484 the defendant filed a motion in arrest of judgment on the following grounds: (1) Because the jury "did not return a valid verdict." (2) Because the verdict was too vague, indefinite and uncertain to support a judgment. (3) Because the verdict "was for no definite or ascertained sum." The Court below overruled the motion, and entered a judgment for the plaintiff for $152.82, with interest from June 3rd, 1919 (the date of the verdict) and costs, and this appeal is from that judgment.
The contention of the appellant is, as indicated in his motion, that "inasmuch as the verdict included an allowance for interest without stating on what sums or from what date the interest was allowed that it was for that reason so uncertain and ambiguous that no judgment could properly have been entered upon it." He relies upon the case of Gaither v. Wilmer,
The principle stated by JUDGE MILLER is supported by both sound reasoning and authority, but the distinction between that case and the case at bar is obvious. In that case the verdict rendered by the jury did not specify any amount of damages, and the judgment was entered for an amount not found or determined by the jury. In this case the verdict did contain a specified amount, and attempted to award the plaintiff, in addition thereto, another and unascertained amount, and the judgment was entered for the amount specified in the verdict, with interest thereon, as required by the statute, from the date of the verdict. The Court, before the verdict was recorded could, in accordance with the approved practice, have sent the jury to their room to ascertain the amount of interest they intended to allow, but as the Court received the verdict, and the plaintiff makes no objection to it, and is willing to accept a judgment for the amount specified *Page 486
therein, we see no ground for valid objection on the part of the defendant. It is true, if the jury had been sent back to their room to determine the interest to be allowed, they could have changed their verdict, even to the extent of giving a verdict for the defendant, but if the verdict in question was one upon which a judgment could properly be entered, the defendant has no good reason to complain that he was denied the benefit of the mere possibility of such a change. If the defendant's motion had been filed by the plaintiff, the case would have presented a different question, but the settled rule of this Court is that a judgment will not be reversed except for errors calculated to prejudice the appellant, and we see no reason why a different rule should be applied in this case. In the case of Charles County v.Mandanyohl,
For the reasons stated, and without departing from the rule announced in Gaither v. Wilmer, supra, we must affirm the judgment of the Court below.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *Page 487
