Kilgus v. Wayne Co.

88 A. 1056, 85 N.J.L. 351, 56 Vroom 351, 1913 N.J. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 88 A. 1056 (Kilgus v. Wayne Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilgus v. Wayne Co., 88 A. 1056, 85 N.J.L. 351, 56 Vroom 351, 1913 N.J. LEXIS 285 (N.J. 1913).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

White, J.

Where a jury renders an excessive verdict the court may and frequently does, upon a rule to show cause, put the plaintiff upon terms whereby unless he shall, within a fixed time, remit all above an amount specified by the court, the rule shall be made absolute; otherwise, that is, upon his so remitting, it shall be dismissed. This is an exercise of the equitable power of the court whereby it prevents a miscarriage of justice by thwarting the unjust action of the jury in deliberately rendering a verdict for the excessive amount. What the court does is not for the purpose of carrying out the finding of the jury, but on the contrary, to defeat it in so far as it is unjust.

There is another and very different power of the court, however, the purpose of which, instead of being to defeat the intent of the jury, is, on the contrary, to carry it into effect. That power is the right and duty of the trial court in a case where the verdict of the jury is informal in form or erroneous through mistake, but where the real purpose of the jury sufficiently appears, to mould the verdict as rendered to correspond with the substance of the real verdict as agreed upon by the jury and intended to be rendered. This power and duty are well recognized. Peters v. Fogarty, 26 Vroom 386.

In the ease at bar this distinction is important because of the fact that in fixing the amount of the reduced verdict the learned trial judge included in it the sum of $298.85, interest, which, as he admits and as is perfectly manifest from the circumstances and the admission of the attorneys on both [354]*354sides, the jury did not include nor agree to include in their verdict. If he had been reducing the real verdict in order to thwart an unjust purpose of the jury, he might, with entire propriety, have included this interest item. In his charge he instructed them to include it, and the fact that they did not, could not affect him in making up his own mind as to how much, wifhin the limits of the verdict rendered it was right and equitable for the plaintiff to be permitted to recover. But he was not doing this. He was attempting to mould the verdict rendered so that it would conform with the verdict the jury intended to render. He was doing this to correct an inadvertent, mistake on the part of the jury in using, in computing their verdict, the wrong figure instead of the right one to represent the undisputed and admitted unpaid balance of the contract price. That is what the voluntary application of the plaintiff (upon which he acted) asked him to do; it is what the proof upon which he relied as justifying what he did do, laid the groundwork for doing; and it is what the language of his decision (“the verdict should be corrected”) indicates he was doing. It would be a strange doctrine which would permit a trial judge, in moulding a verdict to correspond with the real finding of the jury, to insert something which admittedly they did not find and never agreed to find. It is no justification to say that they were instructed to so find and should have done so. The remedy for a disregard of proper'instructions is a new trial. The trial court is without power to find a verdict the jury did not find. As was said by Mr. Justice Scudder in Gerhab v. White, 11 Vroom 242: “Where there is incongruity in a verdict, the court cannot make it consistent; and where there is ambiguity or uncertainty, the judge cannot make it definite and certain. But where the verdict is informally expressed the court may and should render it formal and effective.” This case is urged as an authority against the power of the court to mould this verdict at all, but we think there is a clear distinction. It is true that in the Gerhab case also, the verdict (rendered in the absence of the trial judge) was for the “full amount of the plaintiff’s claim.” The dif[355]*355ficulty there, however, was that this “full amount” was a disputed and not a fixed amount. The declaration was on the common counts, the bill of particulars claimed $2,828.11, the plaintiff’s attorney said before the jury that he would he satisfied with $1,100, and the whole fight was over how much, if anything, the plaintiff’s just claim amounted to. It was not possible to say with certainty what the jury meant. In the case at bar the item about which the mistake occurred was undisputed, admitted and definitely fixed, and the only item of dispute, the amount of bonus, was found in unmistakable terms by the jury. There was no possible question of the jury’s intention and so no “inconsistency, ambiguity or uncertainty.”

It is urged, however, that all the elements (an excessive verdict, a rule to show cause, a fixing of the correct amount by the court, a remission of the excess by the plaintiff, and a discharge of the rule) are here present to constitute a valid exercise of the equitable power of the court to reduce an excessive verdict, and as that alone will render complete justice by including the item of interest, to which clearly the plaintiff below was entitled, the action of the learned trial judge should be affirmed as an exercise of such power, even although it was done under the guise of moulding the verdict. The difficulty with this proposition is that a prior duty of the court intervened. It was the first duty of the trial court to see that the true verdict of the jury was recorded, before it gave a thought to the question of whether that verdict was or was not excessive. ’ The moulding of the verdict is only an exercise of this duty. It is a correction of the record of the verdict making it conform to the verdict as actually agreed upon by the jury. The admitted facts establishing, as they did in this case, that the jury had agreed upon a definite verdict and that through, a pure mistake another verdict had been recorded, it became the absolute duty of the court to correct the record so that it would record the real verdict. This could only be done by including just what the jury included and nothing else. It is true that the verdict will then be too small by the item of interest [356]*356which the jury did not allow, but so would it have been too small by that amount if the figure named by the jury and recorded had been the one representing what they agreed upon. No one will seriously contend that it is within the power of the court to add to the amount of the verdict of a jury an item which they should have agreed to include but did not. The remedy is the granting of a rule for a new trial, and an application for this remedy will still remain open to the plaintiff below, should he desire to avail himself of it, after the verdict has been properly moulded in accordance herewith.

We think the learned trial judge was right in so moulding the verdict as to correct a pure inadvertent mistake on the part of the jury by reducing the sum found to the sum which the jury-thought they were finding, but that he was in error in adding to this, an item (interest) which admittedly the jury did not intend to include in their verdict.

Error is also assigned to the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict for the defendant. This direction was asked upon the authority of Van Buskirk v. Board of Education, 49 Vroom 650, where this court upheld a direction of a verdict upon the calculation by the architect, in his final certificate, of liquidated damages for a tardy completion. In that case, however, there was no dispute about the date of completion. That was admitted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 1056, 85 N.J.L. 351, 56 Vroom 351, 1913 N.J. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilgus-v-wayne-co-nj-1913.