Flournoy v. Brown

26 So. 2d 351, 200 Miss. 171, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 279
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1946
DocketNo. 36088.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 26 So. 2d 351 (Flournoy v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flournoy v. Brown, 26 So. 2d 351, 200 Miss. 171, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 279 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

*175 Smith, L. A., Sr., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant became the owner by inheritance in 1935 of 389.60 acres of farm land in Sunflower County. This plantation she rented to tenants, and she lived in New Orleans. On the 8th day of January 1940, she and appellee signed a lease-contract for a term of five years from January 8,1940, to December 31,1944, inclusive, at rental of $1,500 per annum. In July, 1945, the appellant filed her declaration in the Circuit Court of Sunflower County against appellee demanding $10l,500 as damages for the breach of this contract. The jury awarded appellant $1,000 dmages by the following verdict: “Wé, the jury, find for the plaintiff and assess her damages in the sum of $1,000.” Judgment for said amount was accordingly entered thereon, and from that judgment the plaintiff, in whose favor it was rendered, appealed, she having filed a motion for a new trial on several grounds, including “the amount of damages in the sum of $1,000 awarded to plaintiff by the verdict of the jury and by the judgment of the court is totally inadequate as shown by the evidence.” Her motion for a new trial was overruled, and on this appeal .the sole assignment of error is that ‘ ‘ the trial court erred in overruling motion of appellant for a new trial on the ground that the verdict and judgment in the trial court was inadequate.” It should be noted, and borne in mind, that the appellee, against whom the judgment for damages was entered, did not appeal from the judgment either by a direct or a cross-appeal. In truth, the appellee is resisting, here the reversal of the judgment of the trial court.

Preceding the leasing of this plantation to the appellee,' appellant had rented it to another for an annual rental of $2,000. Appellee, prior to the consummation of the aforesaid lease-contract between the parties hereto, had inspected the plantation, as had his general manager G. W. King, and they found it in bad shape. It was grown up in weeds and noxious grasses, and néeded some wood *176 land to be cleared for the proper degree of correct husbandry. In addition, seven tenant houses were badly in disrepair, while the eighth tenant house was beyond repair, according to their testimony. Also, the barn was in bad shape. It is in the evidence that, influenced by such conditions, the appellant made the annual rental to appellee $1,500 per annum instead of $2,000 as theretofore, a reduction of $2,500 for the five year period of the lease. It was stipulated in the rental contract that at least twenty-five percent of said land should be planted in cover crops and that the cultivation thereof would be in a good husbandlike manner; and that the houses and outhouses on the place would be made suitable for living purposes, and kept in good repair, without cost to appellant; and at the termination of the lease all improvements, changes or additions, should belong to and become the property of the appellant without any cost; that appellee would not assign the contract or sublet the premises without appellant’s written consent; and that appellee would clear up and put into a state of cultivation at least fifty acres of woodland on the place at the rate of ten acres per annum. The declaration charged breach of the obligations of the contract. It is specified in the declaration that appellant failed to repair and keep repaired the houses and outhouses; to cultivate the land in a husband-like manner; to plant cover crops, and to clear up fifty acres of woodland. These were the elements of the gross amount of damages sought, $10,500, and were detailed in the declaration in one count, without allocating to any specific breach in the declaration any certain amount as entering into the aggregate total of the amount claimed as damages, charging merely that: “The said defendant has hitherto wholly failed, neglected and refuséd to perform the aforesaid covenants and agreements of said contract as he thereby undertook and faithfully promised to do. To the damage of said plaintiff of $10,500.” The sounding of the declaration for damages, therefore, is not by separate counts but wholly for breach of contract as the *177 sole and single gravamen of the complaint leading to the total snm of damages demanded.

A number of witnesses testified for each of the parties and there was a sharp conflict in the testimony as to liability. The jury, however, found for the plaintiff. They evidently adopted the evidence in support of appellant’s contention that the appellee had breached his rental contract, and was therefore liable to appellant in damages. Appellee argues here “that where the court is called upon to pass on the sole question of the inadequacy of the amount of the verdict rendered by the jury, it is the duty of this Court to consider all of the testimony offered in the case, and where there is a material conflict in the testimony, the verdict will not be disturbed by this Court unless there is some error of law or where it has been plainly produced by prejudice or passion or other improper motive.” He cites Hasie v. Alabama, etc., R. Company, 79 Miss. 581, 31 So. 199; Stokes v. Adams-Newell Lbr. Company, 151 Miss. 711, 118 So. 441; Moseley v. Jamison, 68 Miss. 336, 8 So. 744; Green v. Everson, 141 Miss. 129, 106 So. 265. The nature of his authorities is indicated by the following partial quotation from Hasie v. Alabama, etc., R. Company, supra [79 Miss. 581, 31 So. 200]: “And there is nothing in the record showing, or tending to show, that the finding of the jury was plainly produced by prejudice or passion or other improper motive; but, on the contrary, it'sufficiently appears that the jury has responded to the whole demand made upon it by the law and the evidence.” These cases correctly state the law, of course, in this State in dealing with the principles therein justified by the facts of the cases. Appellee cites these authorities in support of his contention that the case should not be reversed and remanded on the issue of damages. They are also authorities that the finding of the jury for plaintiff as to liability should not be disturbed by us, since it does not appear that the finding of liability was produced by prejudice or passion or *178 other improper motive. It will here he well to recall that defendant below, appellee here, did not appeal.

However, pertinent to the second part of the jury’s verdict,-assessing appellant’s damages at $1,000, there is another line of cases in this State, while holding that a verdict or finding by the jury will not, on appeal, be disturbed as against the evidence because of a mere preponderance of evidence against it, it will be set aside when it is palpably against the weight of evidence, or clearly shows that the jury was mistaken. In Herron v. Bondurant & Todd, 45 Miss. 683, the Court said: “The verdict is too manifestly wrong to be sustained.” In Presley v. Quarles, 31 Miss. 151, it was held that a new trial will be granted when the verdict is greatly against the weight of the evidence. It was said in Drake v. Surget, 36 Miss. 458, that a new trial will not be awarded when there is no error in the rulings of the court below unless the evidence greatly preponderate against the verdict, or the verdict be without evidence, or appear to be manifestly wrong from the record before the court. In White et al. v. McCoy, 7 So.

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Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 351, 200 Miss. 171, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flournoy-v-brown-miss-1946.