Tumelty v. Peerless Stages

274 P. 430, 96 Cal. App. 530, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 56
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1929
DocketDocket Nos. 6560 and 6561.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 274 P. 430 (Tumelty v. Peerless Stages) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tumelty v. Peerless Stages, 274 P. 430, 96 Cal. App. 530, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 56 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

GOODELL, J., pro tem.

These appeals are taken by the defendants from an order granting, in part, plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

The plaintiff sued for damages in the sum of twenty-one thousand six hundred dollars alleged to have been suffered through the negligence of both defendants, Peerless Stages and J. H. Asselin. The plaintiff was riding in the automobile of the defendant Asselin, as his guest, with members of *531 his family, when a collision occurred between the Asselin ear, proceeding southerly on the highway near Milpitas, and an autostage of the defendant stage company proceeding northerly. The traffic was heavy on the Sunday afternoon in question, and the stage had turned to its left out of the line of north-bound traffic, the progress of which had become somewhat retarded, and soon after leaving the line the two vehicles collided. The point presented on appeal renders unnecessary a more detailed statement of the occurrence. The jury returned a verdict against both defendants for one thousand dollars. The plaintiff moved for a new trial, which motion was ‘1 granted as to the issues of damage only, on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict rendered herein.”

“The question herein presented,” to adopt counsel’s own statement of it, “is one solely of law—whether the order of the trial court was within its jurisdiction.”

Since the case of San Diego Land & Town Co. v. Neale, 78 Cal. 63 [3 L. R. A. 83, 20 Pac. 372], it has been settled law in this state (and it seems to be the prevailing rule elsewhere) that “It is within the power of the trial court, where there is more than one issue of fact in a case and such issues are distinct and separable in their nature, to order a new trial of one issue and refuse it as to the others.” (Estate of Everts, 163 Cal. 449 [125 Pac. 1058]; see, also, Duff v. Duff, 101 Cal. 1 [35 Pac. 437], Levin v. Sherwood, 55 Cal. App. 308 [203 Pac. 404], and Donnatin v. Union etc. Co., 38 Cal. App. 8 [175 Pac. 26, 177 Pac. 845].)

The appellants readily and frankly recognize this, but urge that an order granting a limited new trial “is wholly erroneous in this character of ease,” the argument being that in an action for personal injuries, where negligence is seriously disputed at the trial, the issues of negligence and damage are so inextricably interwoven that a new trial on the issue of damages alone is legally unauthorized. The case at bar, it is claimed, is within the qualification respecting severability of issues, expressed in Estate of Everts, supra.

The Neale ease itself recognizes that “there may be eases where the issues are so inseparably blended as to render a separation impracticable.” The only question for decision, as we see it, is whether it may be said as a matter of law that in any and every personal injury ease the issues of *532 negligence and damage are so “inseparably blended” that a new trial, if granted at all, must be granted as to all the issues.

The rule is a familiar one that “the granting of a new trial for want of evidence to support the verdict is usually a matter almost entirely within the discretion of the trial court. Such order will not be reversed unless an abuse of discretion appears.” (Estate of Everts, supra.)

If, therefore, trial courts have the undoubted power to grant limited new trials in all cases where the issues are severable, and if it be true that the granting of a new trial for want of evidence to support the verdict is discretionary, the question presents itself whether there is anything peculiar to personal injury cases, as such, that removes them into a class by themselves, and renders them immune from the operation of the rule applicable to new trials generally. The appellants cite no authority in California or from other jurisdictions which goes so far as to so hold. Counsel shows that there is no reported decision in this state where such limited new trial has been granted in a negligence case, but while there is such absence of authority counsel for the appellants cite a number of personal injury cases from the New England states and from North Carolina, where, without exception, the rule is found to be the same as that in California. True, in some of these cases the courts determined that the issues of liability and damage were so blended as to render their separation prejudicial (and the cases are, of course, cited for their persuasive effect in that regard), but it is likewise true that in our own state whenever such issues are found to be so identified our own courts, trial and appellate, will be just as ready to follow that course. The circumstance that in some instances, because the facts of the particular case compelled it, new trials sought on some issues have been ordered as to all issues, does not indicate that there should be a special exception in personal injury cases. It is simply an application of the reservation found in San Diego Land & Town Co. v. Neale, supra, “that there may be cases where the issues are so inseparably blended as to render a separation impracticable. ’ ’

In Jarrett v. High Point Truck & Bag Co., 144 N. C. 299 [56 S. E. 937], cited by appellants, the court was strongly *533 urged to depart from Benton v. Collins (which sanctions limited new trials in negligence cases), and, addressing itself to that argument, the court says: “As we have awarded a new trial generally, it is not necessary now to determine that question.” In Benton v. Collins, 125 N. C. 91 [47 L. R. A. 33, 34 S. E. 242], it was held that the trial court may set aside a verdict as to damages, and award a new trial on that issue alone, though some of the matters involved in the other issues may have tended to mitigate the damages; for whatever evidence was introduced on the first trial on such other issues in mitigation of damages would be admissible on the second trial on the general issues as to damages. The same case holds that the action of the trial court in setting aside a verdict for inadequacy of damages, being discretionary, is not reviewable. It is interesting to note that this was an action for damages growing out of an assault and battery, a type of case, certainly, where the facts of the occurrence would seem to lend color to the question of damages. In Doody v. Boston & Maine R. R. Co., 77 N. H. 161 [Ann. Cas. 1914C, 846, 849, 89 Atl. 487, 490], a personal injury case, the general rule is recognized that “so much of the verdict as is not affected by the error” should be preserved and a new trial granted as to the rest. But it was found that the particular circumstances of the case were such that a new trial should be granted in whole. In Pepper v. Lee (R. I.), 114 Atl. 10, the supreme court of Rhode Island likewise found that “in this particular case the testimony bearing upon damages and liability is interwoven” (italics ours) and ordered a new trial

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Bluebook (online)
274 P. 430, 96 Cal. App. 530, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tumelty-v-peerless-stages-calctapp-1929.