Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway v. Perry

13 Tenn. App. 268, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 14, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 268 (Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway v. Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway v. Perry, 13 Tenn. App. 268, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

This action for damages for personal injuries to the infant plaintiff, Peggy Florence Perry, resulted, upon the second trial, in a verdict and judgment for $2500 against the Railway. Upon the first trial a verdict for $2000 was set aside by the Circuit Judge because he could not rest satisfied with the verdict. „Upon the second trial he stated that the ease had'given him a great deal of concern, but that he would overrule the motion of defendant for a new trial. Thereupon a motion in arrest of judgment was made, and on the next day it was heard and overruled. Then occurred the following colloquy between His Honor and the.counsel:

“THE COURT: Do you gentlemen ask me to put in the record the reasons I stated for overruling the motion for a new trial?
“MR. BANKS: The reporter has a statement you made yesterday morning.
“THE COURT: I started to say this, you can get it on record, that this case has given me a great deal of concern about the facts which it has, and I pondered over it quite a bit. In this case I became the twenty-fifth juror rather than the thirteenth, and the weight of the finding of twenty-four *270 men left me in doubt in my mind as to the facts, and I took that into consideration, and became satisfied to overrule the motion, ’ ’

The rule is invoked that the appellate court will not sustain a challenged judgment where the Trial Judge did not approve the verdict of the jury. In Railway Company v. Mahoney, 89 Tenn., 310, 331, 15 S. W., 652, the rule was stated by Chief Justice Snodgrass as follows :

“If, upon a first or second trial, the Circuit Judge is dissatisfied, because the evidence does not preponderate in favor of the verdict, or does not support it, though there was some evidence upon which it might have been based, it is his duty to set it aside, and we do so if it appears he did not approve it and yet.permitted it to stand.”

This rule was applied in Turner v. Turner, 85 Tenn., 387, 3 S. W., 121; Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Smithwick, 112 Tenn., 463, 79 S. W., 803; Hurt v. Railroad, 140 Tenn., 623, 205 S. W., 437. These were cases in which the trial judges expressed positive disapproval of the verdicts. In the following cases the judgments were reversed and new trials were ordered, because the trial, judges expressed neither approval nor disapproval of the verdicts: Railroad v. Lee, 95 Tenn., 387; 18 S. W., 268; Curran v. State, 157 Tenn., 7, 4 S. W. (2d), 957; Hamburger v. R. R., 138 Tenn., 123, 196 S. W., 144.

In the Smithwick case, supra, it was declared that if the circuit judge is dissatisfied with the verdict of the jury, and if, from his statements it appears that he was really not satisfied with it, it becomes the duty of the appellate court, when it has acquired jurisdiction of the cause, to do what the circuit judge should have done; that is, to grant a new trial on the ground of the dissatisfaction of that judicial officer with the verdict. The reasons for the rule are fully set forth in this and other decisions. In the Hamburger case, the Court said: “We must know that the verdict of the jury has the approval of his judgment and his conscience. The judgment upon the verdict is not an idle ceremony, but is intended to convey to this court the approval of the trial judge of the weight and credibility of the witnesses as fixed by the verdict of the jury. ’ ’

In Turner v. Turner, supra, it was said:

“The rule, and the reasons for it, are well stated in the case of England v. Burt, 4 Hum., 401-2, and need not be repeated here. In that case the judgment was allowed to stand because the Circuit Judge only stated that ‘he did not know whether if he had been of the jury he would have considered the evidence sufficient,’ etc. But here it' appears clearly that the Judge thought the preponderance was against it, and merely deferred to the judgment of the jury. This must not be allowed. *271 Otherwise this court would sit in each case in the relation of the Circuit Judge to each verdict and trial and he would be but the medium through which the case was passed to us for consideration, requiring this Court to act under the rule operative upon the Circuit Judge to weigh the evidence and determine where the preponderance was, instead of under the rule long settled by this Court to determine the case by affirming his judgment when it was upon a verdict sustained by any legal evidence which was sufficient to authorize it. ’ ’

The pivotal point in that case was that the circuit judge only allowed the verdict to stand because the jury had rendered it. He did not exercise that independent judgment which is necessary to complete the exercise of the functions of trial judge and jury. If he does not do so he does not act as a thirteenth juror. He must be satisfied as well as the jury — not because the jury is satisfied, but because he is satisfied. “This view is based not only upon the supposition that the jury has considered and passed upon the fact/', but also that the parties have had the benefit of the trained intelligence of the circuit judge as well.” Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Smithwick, supra.

It is clear from these decisions that upon the first or second trial, the circuit judge is not at liberty to overrule a motion based upon the preponderance of the evidence unless he, in his own judgment and conscience, approves the verdict of the jury thereon.

Now, in the case before us, the Circuit Judge did say that he became satisfied to overrule the motion; but it is evident that he reached this conclusion because of the verdicts of two juries. In our opinion this did not satisfy the requirements of the law, and the judgment, on this ground, alone, would have to be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. But it is insisted that there is no evidence to sustain the verdict, and that the Railway’s motion for a directed verdict in its favor, made at the close of all the evidence, should have been sustained.

The action was tried to the jury alone on the fourth or common law count of the declaration, in which it was averred that the plaintiff approached the crossing in a two-horse wagon and within a reasonable and lawful distance therefrom the driver stopped his team and looked and listened for trains; that said driver thus complied with the law and while exercising due care, prudence and caution, having neither observed nor heard any train, was in the act of driving across the Railway tracks, “when suddenly and without warning one of defendant’s locomotives bore down upon the plaintiff and the other occupants of said wagon approaching them from the north (the track running practically north and south and the highway east and west) and when within a few feet of plain *272

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13 Tenn. App. 268, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-chattanooga-st-louis-railway-v-perry-tennctapp-1931.