Court Opinion

ID: 8012832
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:00:14.428633+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:09.774226
License: Public Domain

Robinson, J.
This action was begun to recover damages to abutting private property charged to have resulted from a change of grade of Independence avenue just east of the eastern limits of Kansas City. The action was'against the defendants, the Kansas City Cable Railway Company, the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company, and James Lillis. The case was tried by a jury, under instructions from the court, resulting in the following verdict: “We the jury find for plaintiffs, and against the defendant the Kansas City Cable Railway Company and do assess their damages at $3,500. Oscar Thompson, foreman.” On this a judgment was duly entered against the Kansas City Cable Railway Company and in favor of the other two defendants. After unsuccessful motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment the defendants have prosecuted their appeal to this court.
Just what grievance has been done the defendants Lillis and the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company by the rendition of a judgment in their favor, has not been very definitely suggested. Usually such judgments meet the defendants’ highest approval and we are unable to see now by this appeal how their condition can be improved or why they should be heard to complain.
Four assignments of error have been made and *216argued by tbe counsel for appellants in the briefs filed herein as follows:
First. The damages are excessive.
Second. Plaintiff’s instructions number one and two were erroneous.
Third. There was no evidence to authorize a verdict against the Kansas City Cable Railway Company.
Fourth. The verdict is erroneous in that if did not find all the issues.
These we will notice in the inverse order of their presentation to us.
I. Was the failure of the verdict to find expressly for or against the defendants Lillis or the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company reversible error, in view of the action of the court thereon, and of the non-action of the defendant the Kansas City Cable Car Company at the time1? Judgment was entered by the trial court in due form for the plaintiff, against the defendant the Kansas City Cable Car Company, of whom alone the jury found guilty as charged in plaintiff’s petition, and in favor of the other defendants, Lillis and the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company, against whom no verdict was expressly rendered. The last two defendants did not complain of the court’s action in this particular in their motion for a new trial (and really no grievance was done to either of them by the judgment), neither did the defendant the Kansas City Cable Car Company in its motions for a new trial or in arrest of judgment, call to the attention of the trial court the irregularity of the verdict, or the error of the judgment entered thereon, if error it be considered. Only such errors as are fatal to the merits of an action, although appearing upon the face of the record, will be considered on appeal. State ex rel. v. Scott, 104 Mo. 31, and cases cited. In fact, the statute expressly inhibits the reversal of judgments by this court unless *217it shall believe that error has been committed against appellant or plaintiff in error materially affecting the merits of the action. R. S., sec. 2303. If the jury found that the cable car company was guilty of a tort in the -nature of a trespass in entering upon and changing the grade of the street in front of plaintiff’s property it was liable for the entire amount of damages caused by its act, without reference to the question as to who else or how many others participated in the same wrong. Between joint wrong-doers no right of contribution exists, that one can be heard to complain that all guilty of the wrong have not been included in the same action or included in one common judgment rendered as the result of its prosecution. The plaintiff could at any stage of the proceedings have dismissed as to any one or more of the defendants without consent of the remaining and without affecting in the least the merit of his action or the character or amount of his judgment. Neither the amount nor character of the judgment that would follow the prosecution of his action would be in anywise affected, and if so how can it be said that error was committed against the Kansas City Cable Car Company materially affecting the merits of the action in so far as it is concerned? The application of the rule declared in the case of Ferguson v. Thacher, 79 Mo. 511, cited by appellant, has no force here. Tn that case the plaintiff below was the plaintiff in error, and his complaint was that the jury had not found any verdict as to two of the defendants, and that the judgment likewise was silent as to the liability of those defendants. There the error complained of materially affected the right of the party making complaint. To have the right to a verdict and judgment against three defendants is not satisfied by a verdict and judgment against but one of them, so far as concerns plaintiff, who asked for judg*218ment against all; but the force of that objection is without vitality when invoked by one of three codefendants against whom a verdict has been found, and upon which a judgment has been duly entered, when the liability of the joint tort committed was both joint and several, and with no right of contribution existing among the joint tort feasors if one only of the number should pay or be adjudged to pay all the damages. Neither the one adjudged guilty nor the ones not condemned by the verdict have a just ground of complaint.
II. Appellant’s next contention that “there was no evidence to authorize a verdict against the Kansas City Cable Railway Company” and its objection to plaintiff’s second instruction to the effect, “that if the jury believe from the evidence the excavation of Independence avenue in front of plaintiff’s property was done by James Lillis under a contract with the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company, and they further believe that the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company were acting as the agents for defendant, the Kansas City Cable Railway Company, for the purpose of constructing and operating its railroad thereon, and such act and use of said road damaged the plaintiff’s property herein referred to, all the defendants are liable for the amount of such damages,” may properly be considered together. Practically the same question was raised and discussed in the ease of Brady v. K. C. Cable R’y Co. (the same defendant), 111 Mo. 329, under the same state of facts as were shown in this case, with an adverse ruling then to appellant’s contention now, the plaintiffs in this, and that case, owning adjoining properties fronting on Independence avenue, where the excavation is changed to have been made by defendants. As was said in that case, so it can be said in this: “For although there was evidence tending to prove that the contract (for grading down the street) was made in the *219name of the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company, a corporation controlled by the same officers as those of the defendant (the cable car company), yet the evidence tended to prove that the contract, if there was such an one, was made at the instance of the defendant (the cable car company) and conclusive that it was made for its benefit; and that the work was done by its direction, by its general contractor for such work and paid for with its funds, and the fruits of it are exclusively in its enjoyment.” Not only was the trial court justified by the evidence in submitting to the jury the question as to whether or not the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company was acting as the agent for the Kansas City Cable Car Company, but the conclusion of its existence was'so manifest that the jury could not well have resisted it. The jury -no" doubt concluded that the Kansas City and Independence Railway Company was a mere substanceless corporate creation, used to conceal from view the real operator, the cable car company, and to that fact, in part, may be attributed the failure of the jury to mention that company in its finding.
Again, the cable car company should not now be heard to complain of the action of the trial court in submitting the question of agency to the jury, for at its instance the following instruction ■ was submitted and given to the jury:
“Although you may believe that the Kansas City Cable Railway Company furnished the money to its co-defendant, Kansas City and Independence Railway Company, to construct its road, under a contract that it should thereafter operate the same, this' does not authorize you to find against the cable company. You must further believe that the same was done for the cable company, and that the Independence company *220was acting for the cable company in so doing, and unless you so believe you will find for the cable company.”
When the appellant itself' has asked the judgment of the jury upon a given issue, it will not afterward be heard to challenge the verdict on the ground that the issue was improperly submitted, to them. So also while it might be said as a general proposition, that the question of agency is one for the consideration of the court, when the facts out of which the agency may be deduced are in dispute as in this case. Agency, like any other controverted question, is a matter for the determination of the jury.
III. We think that appellants’ objection to the plaintiff’s second instruction regarding the measure of damages is rather technical than substantial. The instruction reads: “And in determining the-amount of such damage, if any, you should consider the value of the property before the work was done and the value thereof immediately after the same was done, but in determining the value of the property after the work was done, you should not take into consideration such general benefits, if any, as the plaintiff’s property derives in common with the other property in the same community from the fact that a cable railroad is built in front of the same; and if you find that the value of such property .immediately after the work was completed, less the general benefit, if any, sustained therefrom, as aforesaid, was less than the value thereof immediately before the work complained of was begun, and that depreciation in value was caused by reason of the acts of the defendants, or either of them, hereinbefore referred to, then your verdict should be for the amount of such difference.”
The term “community” as used therein, while not a complete synonym .for “neighboi'hood” or “vicinity” (the terms generally used in this character *221of instruction) certainly had no tendency to mislead the jury unfavorably to defendants. In common parlance, and as the jury probably understood the meaning of the word “community,” it has a broader significance than the word “neighborhood” or “locality” and for that reason would seem more favorable than otherwise to appellant. Nor do we think, as is further contended by appellants, that the instruction" “first tells the jury to leave out of consideration general benefits from constructing the road in determining the value of the property after the work was completed, and then requires them after having thus left the general benefits out of consideration to go further and deduct from the value of the property thus found the amount of such general benefits, and’ then give the difference as damages between this reduced valuation and the value before the work was done.” Though the instruction is not as happily worded as it might have been, we do not think the jury would give to it the strained construction claimed by respondents, and there is nothing in- the amount of the damages awarded to indicate that they did. This court will not reverse a case for every obscurity or inaccuracy of expression that an instruction may contain; but, to warrant its action in that behalf, there must exist some positive error, such as in the opinion of the court substantially affects the merits of the action. Haniford v. Kansas City, 103 Mo. 172, and cases cited.
IY. This brings us to the consideration of appellant’s first ground urged for a reversal, that the damages are so excessive as to indicate prejudice on the part of the jury in making the award. Where there is testimony given by plaintiff and his witnesses, as in this case, to the fact of plaintiff’s damages, and to the extent thereof largely in excess of the amount awarded by the jury, and the instructions as given, *222correctly defined the measure of damages, there is nothing for this court to do but to affirm the judgment predicated thereon. The questions as to the amount of plaintiff’s damages, is peculiarly and exclusively the province of the jury, under the Constitution and laws of this State, and in the exercise of that prerogative they are restricted in so far as concerns the appellate court, only by the limitation of the' testimony. While the jury had no right to make a finding beyond the range of the testimony offered (that is, beyond an amount where testimony reached), within that range and limitation its determination, in this court, is final and conclusive. The award of excessive damages, constitutes no error of law, the review alone of which this court has authority and power to make.
In a strict legal sense there is no such thing as a verdict indicating prejudice and passion on the ground alone of its amount, if it is within the limits of the testimony given, in so far as concerns the considerations of this court. That question must be addressed to the trial court, where alone the right to examine into the facts considered and passed upon by the jury is vested, before its judgment upon the verdict is required. If the jury have been properly instructed on the measure of damages in a case disclosing the existence of substantial damages, no question of law is involved in the consideration of the amount of the verdict, but one solely of fact, and as such, it falls outside the jurisdiction of inquiry of this court, as do all questions upon the weight of evidence. If, however, the verdict was beyond the limit of the testimony then it might be said to be a verdict without testimony, and for that, this court could say as a legal conclusion, it was erroneous and the judgment based thereon must be reversed; but within that limit this *223•court can not enter to determine how much the verdict is excessive, or what excess justifies the conclusion that the verdict was inspired by prejudice or passion. To determine the question as to the excess of a verdict, necessarily involves the idea of determining what is and should be the proper verdict, and that as above said, is purely a question of fact, and like all other issues of fact, falls within the special province of the jury, and this court. has no better or higher right to substitute its judgment on that issue for that of the jury, than upon any and all other issues of fact.
If it can ever be said that this court in a suit like this for damages has the right to set aside a judgment based upon a verdict on the ground that its amount indicated prejudice or passion on the part of the jury, the verdict must have been without the limit and beyond the range of the testimony, and not what this court, within that range, might determine to be proper, and from that say that the amount above its finding and judgment is excessive. In the late case of Rodney v. Railroad, 127 Mo. 676, this court while announcing that it was satisfied that the damages; awarded by the jury were excessive-, refused to order a remittitur for the supposed excess, as a condition of the affirmance of the judgment, or to reverse the judgment on that ground, because of the want of authority, and power in this court to exercise that prerogative.
The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.
All concur in the result, and in the opinion except that part of the fourth paragraph beginning with the third sentence thereof.