Gates v. Dr. Nichols' Sanatorium, Corp.

55 S.W.2d 424, 331 Mo. 754, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 424 (Gates v. Dr. Nichols' Sanatorium, Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gates v. Dr. Nichols' Sanatorium, Corp., 55 S.W.2d 424, 331 Mo. 754, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 520 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*757 WESTHUES, C.

This action was commenced, by plaintiff, in the Circuit Court of Andrew County to recover damages for injuries sustained as a result of alleged malpractice, while plaintiff was a patient in defendant’s sanatorium in Savannah, Missouri. A change of venue was taken and the cause was tried in the Circuit Court of Holt County, resulting in a verdict for plaintiff in the amount of three thousand dollars ($3000). Defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which the court sustained, and plaintiff appealed.

The Kansas City Court of Appeals, to which court the appeal was properly taken, in an opinion by ARNOLD, J., reversed and remanded the ease with-instructions to the trial court to reinstate the verdict and enter judgment for plaintiff. Defendant filed a motion for rehearing, insisting that the trial court had-.sustained a motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. ' Only two of the judges of the Court- of Appeals participated in the disposition of the case. They were unable to agree on the question and on rehearing the Hon. John C.. Grover was selected as a special judge to sit with the judges in the disposition of the ease. In an opinion by Grover, Special Judge, in which Bland, J., concurred, the order of the circuit court, granting a new trial, was affirmed on the theory that the trial court granted a new trial because the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. Arnold, J., filed a dissenting opinion, holding the majority opinion to be in conflict with an opinion of this court in the case of Crawford v. Stockyards Co., 215 Mo. 394, 114 S. W. 1057. The case was then transferred to this court.

If the order, granting a new trial, was based on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, the action of the trial court must be sustained. [Riche v. City of St. Joseph, 326 Mo. 691, 32 S. W. (2d) 578; Littig v. Urbauer-Atwood Heating Co., 237 S. W. 782 (1), 292 Mo. 226.] We will, therefore, dispose of that question before considering the ease on its merits. The motion for a new trial contained, among others, the following assignments of error:

‘ ‘ The court erred in refusing to give a peremptory instruction, for defendant at the close of plaintiff’s evidence.
*758 “The court erred in refusing to give a peremptory instruction for the defendant at the close of all the evidence.
“The verdict of the jury was against the weight of the evidence, and against the entire weight and current of the testimony.”

The order of the trial court, sustaining the motion, recited that it was sustained on the ground “that under all the evidence the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.” Plaintiff’s assignment of error in the Court of Appeals reads as follows:

“The trial court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s motion for new trial and in holding that under all the evidence, plaintiff did not make a case for the jury.”

The meaning of the language, above quoted, found in the order of the trial court, sustaining the motion, is the subject for discussion. The theory of the majority opinion of the Court of Appeals can best be undertood by quoting the pertinent parts thereof, which read as follows:

“The plaintiff charges several grounds of negligence with respect to plaintiff’s treatment and while at defendant’s sanatorium. The evidence is conflicting, but after reading and carefully considering the evidence, we are of the opinion that plaintiff made a case for the jury. The trial court evidently was of this opinion as he overruled the demurrer at the close of plaintiff’s case, and again at the conclusion of the testimony and submitted the case to the jury.
“The case of Carnie v. Toll, 281 S. W. 41, is decisive of the issues in this case. The court in speaking of the trial court’s action in sustaining a motion for new trial, ‘for the reason that the judgment rendered herein is without evidence to support the same, ’ says: ’ ’

The opinion then quotes copiously from the Carnie case and concludes as follows:

“In the case of Somerville v. Stockton, 178 Mo. 121, the words ‘that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict,’ and in Van Liew v. Beverage Co., 144 Mo. 509, the words, ‘the verdict was not sustained by the evidence,’ are both held as sustaining the motions for new trial as against the weight of the evidence.
“Based upon these declarations, the fact that the burden is upon plaintiff to make her case by the greater weight of the evidence, and the proceedings at the trial, we hold that the language used in the order granting the new trial charges that the verdict of the jury was against the weight of the evidence.”

The holding in Somerville v. Stockton, supra, is sound. To say that there is an insufficient amount of evidence implies that there is some evidence and, therefore, to say “that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict” can be construed as meaning that there is some evidence but not enough in the light of the evidence to *759 the contrary to support the verdict. The same may be said of the Van Liew case, supra.

The opinion in Carnie v. Toll, supra, presents some difficulty. It seems to the writer that words must be interpolated into the order to hold the statement in the order “that the judgment rendered herein is without evidence to support the same” to mean that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. This conclusion was reached, as will be disclosed by the opinion, by the process of elimination. In other words the opinion holds that the record contained substantial evidence to support the verdict; that the trial court rightly overruled the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and also the demurrer at the close of all the evidence. The opinion lays much stress on this fact and then concludes that since the trial court had ruled on these questions, adversely to defendant, it must have intended to sustain the motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. To say “a verdict is without evidence to support it” can only mean that the verdict is not supported by any evidence. If there exists any evidence at all in support of the verdict, while it may be insufficient, it is not without evidence. If a verdict is without evidence there is nothing for the trial court to weigh and, therefore, it would be erroneous to say' that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence.

However, in the case now before us the language used in the order, sustaining the motion for a new trial, permits, without doubt, of but one interpretation and that is that the trial court was of the opinion that it should have sustained a demurrer at the close of all the evidence. It is “horn book law” that if a plaintiff “under all the evidence is not entitled to recover,” it is the duty of the trial court to sustain a demurrer and direct a verdict for defendant. The phrase, under discussion, is frequently used by lawyers in offering a demurrer at the close of all the evidence and has a well-known and definite meaning.

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55 S.W.2d 424, 331 Mo. 754, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-dr-nichols-sanatorium-corp-mo-1932.