Wilson ex rel. Otis v. Jernigan

57 Fla. 277
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 57 Fla. 277 (Wilson ex rel. Otis v. Jernigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson ex rel. Otis v. Jernigan, 57 Fla. 277 (Fla. 1909).

Opinion

Shackleford, J.

This is an action of ejectment instituted in the Circuit Court for Santa Rosa County by the plaintiffs in error against the defendant in error, seeking’ to recover the possession of that tract of land known as the “Christian Li-rabaugh Grant,” being Section- twenty-two, Township one North -of Range twenty-nine West, containing -about 700 acres, together with mesne profits. .No point is made on the pleading's, the declaration being-in the usual forra, to which the defendant filed a plea of not guilty. Trial was had before a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant, which the -plaintiffs seek to have reviewed here by writ of error.

Seven errors are assigned, -but the sixth is expressly abandoned. The first and! seventh assignments are discussed tog-ether by the plaintiffs, and we shall likewise so treat them-. The first assignment is based upon the overruling of the motion for a new trial, -while the seventh is based upon ’the refusal of the trial court to instruct or direct the jury to return a verdict in favor -of the plaintiffs. The motion for a new trial -consists of five grounds, the .first four of which question the sufficiency of the evidence and the fifth of which is that the court erred in admitting over the objection of the plaintiffs the deed from John Hobbs as trustee to Tom Robinson and'John Hobbs, such fifth ground, also constituting- the basis for the third assignment.

[281]*281As is admitted 'by the plaintiffs, two-thirds of the transcript is composed of documentary evidence of plaintiffs’ title which is unnecessary for us to consider by reason of the fact that the .court instructed the jury that the plaintiffs had sufficiently deraigned their title from, the sovereign to one John Innerarity, their ancestor, under whom they claim as 'heirs and that if such heirship' is established by a preponderance of the evidence the legal title would be in the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs below, who are the plaintiffs in error here, could not complain of this charge, even if it was erroneous, and as a matter of fact they are making no complaint on that point. No errors of any kind are predicated upon the charge of the court, and the only instruction requested and' refused by the court was a peremptory instruction to return a verdict in their favor. We find that the jury was fully instructed upon the question of 'heirship, and as to the character and degree of proof requisite to establish the same. Since no exception was taken to that portion of the charge and no additional instructions requested by the plaintiffs, they must have conceived that the law applicable thereto was stated correctly. The defendant contends here that such heirship was not sufficiently established and discusses the testimony adduced along that line, but we see no occasion for going into this matter, especially since some of such testimony was admitted without objection. For the purposes of the case, as the matter comes before us. it may be assumed that such heirship was sufficiently established.

This 'brings us to the crucial question of the case, as to the sufficiency of the evidence to establish adverse possession by the defendant for the requisite statutory period. In other words, upon all the evidence adduced, could the jury as reasonable men have found a verdict for the defendant ? In passing upon this question, we are not to be [282]*282guided by what we think the jury ought to have done or what we think we would have done had we been sitting as a jury, but whether as reasonable men they could have found such verdict. This was the question first propounded to the trial judge in the motion for a new trial, which he overruled, thereby giving the verdict his sanction and tacitly answering- such question in the affirmative. See the discussion in Thayer’s Preliminary Treatise on Evidence, 208 et seq.: as to the revising- or setting aside by the court of the verdict of a jury, which we have referred to with approval in Seaboard Air Line R. Co. v. Scarborough, 52 Fla. 425, text 449, 42 South. Rep. 706, text 714, and Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Beazley, 54 Fla. 311, text 422, 45 South. Rep. 761, text 796. We would also refer to the several opinions rendered in Metropolitan Ry. Co. v. Wright, L. R. 11 App. Cas. 152, citations from which appear in note 1 on page 209 of Thayer’s Preliminary Treatise on Evidence. Also, see note on page 69 of Vol. 15 of English Ruling Cases. The jury is the duly constituted authority appointed to decide disputed questions of fact, and we think that this is a wise provision. As was well said in Kelly v. Strouse, 116 Ga. 872, text 888, 43 S. E. Rep. 280, which language we quoted and approved ip Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Beazley, 54 Fla. 311, text 423, 45 South. Rep. 761, text 797: “Juries make mistakes, but their mistakes are probably no more numerous or no- more disastrous to parties and the public than the mistakes of judges who. assume to decide issues of fact.” Professor Thayer, on page 208 of his cited work, in speaking of the province of the trial judge and of the jury, after stating that the duty of keeping the jury within the bounds of reason, “as well as that of preserving- discipline and order, belongs to the judge in his mere capacity of presiding officer in the exercise of judicature,” goes on to say: [283]*283“Reason is not so much a part of the law, as it is the element wherein it lives and works; those who have to administer the law can neither see, nor move, nor breathe without it. Therefore, not merely must t'he jury’s verdict be conformable to legal rules, but it must be defensible in point of sense; it must not be absurd or whimsical. This, of course, is a different thing from- imposing upon the jury the judge’s own private standard of what is reasonable. For example, when the original question for the jury is one of reasonable conduct, and a 'court is called on to revise the verdict, the judges do not undertake to set aside the verdict because their own opinion of the conduct in question differs from: the jury’s. They are not an appellate jury. The question for the court is not whether the conduct ultimately in question, e. g., that of a party in a railway accident, was reasonable, but whether the jury’s conduct is reasonable in holding it to be so; and the test is whether a reasonable person-could, upon the evidence, entertain the jury’s opinion. Can the conduct which the jury are judging, reasonably be 'thought reasonable?” Lord Halsbury said in Metropolitan Railway Co. v. Wright, supra, “If reasonable men might find (not 'ought to’ as was said in Solomon v. Bitton, L. R. 8 Q. B. Div. 176) the verdict which has been found, I think no court has jurisdiction to disturb a decision of fact which the law' has confided to juries, not to judges.* * * I think the test of reasonableness, in considering the verdict of a jury, is right enough, in order to understand whether the jury have really done their duty. If their finding is absolutely unreasonable, a court may consider that that' shows that they have not really performed the judicial duty cast upon 'them.; but the principle must be that the judgment upon the facts is to be the judgment of the jury and not the judgment of any other tribunal.”

[284]*284Now, it is primarily for the trial judge to pass upon this question in ruling upon the motion for a new trial. When 'he concurs in such finding and refuses to disturb it, and there is evidence to- support it, in.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Fla. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-ex-rel-otis-v-jernigan-fla-1909.