Alaska State Housing Authority v. Vincent

396 P.2d 531, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 256
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1964
Docket458
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 396 P.2d 531 (Alaska State Housing Authority v. Vincent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska State Housing Authority v. Vincent, 396 P.2d 531, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 256 (Ala. 1964).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

The Alaska State Housing Authority, hereinafter referred to as the Authority, appeals from a verdict and judgment in the superior court awarding to the appellees $17,000 for the taking of their property in a condemnation proceeding brought against them by the Authority. At times we shall refer herein to the appellees as the Vincents.

The property taken by the Authority from the Vincents consisted of two vacant city lots at Spenard Road and West 19th Avenue in the City of Anchorage. The lots have a combined area of 14,500 feet. On May 1, 1962, court-appointed commissioners found the value of the two lots to be $4,635. The Vincents appealed this finding to the superior court, and the case was there tried by jury in February of 1963. In entering judgment on the jury’s verdict for the Vin-cents, the trial court awarded them an attorney’s fee of $1,250.

*532 Neither party was satisfied with the result. The Vincents felt that the trial court erred in not awarding sufficient attorney fees and in not allowing interest on the award from the date suit was instituted. A motion to amend the judgment to correct the alleged error was filed by the Vincents on March 2, 1963. On December 10, 1963, the court ordered that the judgment previously entered “shall carry interest at six per cent per annum * * * from the date of said Judgment” and that the attorney’s fee remain at $1,250.

The Authority expressed its dissatisfaction with the verdict and judgment by filing a motion on March 4, 1963, for a new trial' ■on the ground that there was no evidence to support the verdict; or, in the alternative, that the court allow the verdict to •stand on the condition that the Vincents “remit an amount consistent with the evidence admitted at the trial.” This motion was denied on September 5, 1963. On December 11, 1963, the Authority gave notice of appeal from the judgment and from the order denying the motion for a new trial, and on January 14, 1964, the Vincents moved in this court to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that it had not been timely filed. We denied the motion, without opinion.

The Vincents filed a cross-appeal on January 7,1964, and in their statement of points on which they intended to rely, claimed error on the part of the trial court in not awarding them an attorney’s fee of at least $2,550 in accordance with Civil Rule 82(a) (l), 1 and in failing to allow them interest from the date that the Authority filed its notice of taking in the case, that is, from May 15, 1961. We dismissed the cross-appeal on our own motion on March 3, 1964, for failure of the Vincents as cross-appellants to file their brief within the time prescribed and in accordance with Supreme Court Rule ll(d). 2

In their brief on this appeal the Vincents ask us to reconsider our order dismissing their cross-appeal for failure to file a timely brief and also our order denying their motion to dismiss the Authority’s appeal. The Vincents have not persuaded us that either order was erroneous or ill advised. Therefore, the orders will remain unchanged.

Going now to the questions presented by the specification of errors appearing in the brief of the Authority, we consider first that agency’s claim that it was reversible error for the jurors to use a dictionary given to them by the bailiff without the consent *533 of the parties or the trial judge. They specify as error on this point:

“2. The jurors’ unauthorized use of a dictionary during their deliberations, and the failure to determine whether such use influenced their verdict.”

It is apparent that the specification charges two distinct errors, one evidently on the part of the jury and the other on the part of the trial judge. Failure to separately set out each error charged constitutes a violation of one of the requirements of Supreme Court Rule 11(a) (6) and where that occurs we need not consider the specification. 3

The next and, as we see it, the basic issue to be resolved in this case is whether the jury’s verdict as to the value of the property is supported by the evidence. That issue is raised rather unartfully in the Authority’s first and third specifications of error which are set forth in the margin below. 4 However, it is quite clear from the arguments advanced by the Authority both in the superior court and on appeal that its contention is that the evidence did not support the verdict because it was both insubstantial and incompetent.

The burden of proof as to Value was, of course, upon the owners of the property, the Vincents. 5 The court so instructed the jury and the Vincents voiced no objection.

The Authority had based its motion for a new trial or remittitur upon the grounds: “That no evidence was admitted at the trial which supports the verdict, thus the jury clearly disregarded the evidence in reaching its verdict or the jury failed to follow the instructions given it by the Court.” In denying the motion, the trial court stated that it relied upon the principles we announced in the case of Snipes v. March. 6

In the Snipes case a jury found the defendant guilty of negligence and gave a verdict in damages for the plaintiff. The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (n. o. v.) and the trial court granted the motion for lack of evidence to support the verdict. We reversed the trial court and ruled that a judgment n. 0. v. is justified only “if the evidence was such that fair minded men, in the exercise of reasonable judgment, could not differ.” And we added, “In our view of the evidence there was room for diversity of opinion among reasonable men * * 7

The Authority urges that the trial court erred in applying the Snipes test to the situation in the instant case. In support of its position, the Authority points out that a judgment n. o. v. constitutes the final disposition of a case, whereas the granting of a new trial does not dispose of the issues but leaves them for another jury to determine. The proper test to be applied to a motion for a new trial, the Authority contends, is that which we announced in Ahlstrom v. Cummings 8 at a date subsequent to the trial court’s ruling upon the motion for a new trial in the instant case. We agree that there is a distinction to be observed by the trial courts in the handling of these two motions.

*534 In the Ahlstrom case in affirming the trial court’s denial of a motion for a new trial, we laid down a different test than that for ruling on a motion for judgment n. o. v., as follows:

“The matter of granting or refusing a new trial rests in the sound discretion of the trial judge. We shall not interfere with the exercise of his discretion except in the most exceptional circumstances and to prevent a miscarriage of justice. The circumstances which would require our intervention do not exist here.

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Bluebook (online)
396 P.2d 531, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-state-housing-authority-v-vincent-alaska-1964.