Court Opinion

ID: 7061806
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 07:21:41.741774+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:12:12.360292
License: Public Domain

Henley, J. —
The appellant was the lessee of a part of appellee’s building, situated in the city of South Bend. Appellee desired to repair and remodel the building, and on account of the inconvenience to which appellant would be put and the loss of trade occasioned thereby to appellant, appellee agreed to partition into sleeping rooms a large room owned by him, but not included in the rental contract with appellant, which large room the appellant was to have the use of, rent free, for the losses occasioned to her by the repairing of the building. Appellee did not partition the room, and appellant Susan J. Junkin brought this action in the lower court against appellee Leibman Lippman, demanding damages for the breach of the contract as above set out. The cause was put at issue and a trial had by jury and a special verdict returned. Upon motion therefor, the lower court rendered judgment upon the special verdict in favor of defendant, and overruled the motion of plaintiff (appellant) for judgment thereon. The motion for a venire de novo was rightly overruled.
The only question before this court is the correctness of the ruling of the lower court in sustaining the motion of appellee for judgment upon the special verdict.
*318We do not believe it would be of any value to tbe legal profession to set out in tbis opinion tbe finding of tbe jury. It is sufficient to say tbat tbe jury found, by its answers to tbe interrogatories submitted, every fact essential to appellant’s recovery, except tbat tbey did not find witbin wbat time tbe appellee agreed to partition or complete tbe work of partitioning tbe large room into bedrooms. It was found tbat appellee agreed to do tbis work in consideration of appellant permitting bim to make tbe repairs and' alterations upon tbe building. Tbe jury found tbat appellee wholly failed to perform bis part of tbe agreement witbin a reasonable time, and tbat appellant bad suffered damages in a certain sum. It was certainly necessary and material for tbe jury to find witbin wbat time, or when tbe work agreed to be done by appellee in partitioning tbe large room was to be completed. Wbat a reasonable time is, depends upon tbe facts to be proved, and showing the character of tbe work, location and extent thereof, tbe season of tbe year, and any other matter tbat might tend to hasten or delay it. Tbe special verdict herein, standing alone, as it must stand, does not show but tbat a reasonable time allowed appellee to complete bis work would have taken bim beyond tbe close of appellant’s tenancy, and in tbat event appellant could not have been damaged.
We do not think there was error of law in rendering judgment for appellee upon tbe special verdict.
Appellant’s counsel argued tbat a new trial should be granted herein, because justice would be thereby better subserved, and insist tbat it is tbe dnty of tbe court, where a special verdict fails to find a material fact, to grant a new trial and allow tbe appellant another opportunity to obtain a judgment. None of tbe cases cited by appellant’s counsel are in point. Take the case of Cleveland, etc., R. R. Co. v. Hadley, 12 Ind. *319App. 516. In that case a material fact was wholly omitted from the verdict; it was an essential element of the plaintiff’s case, and the burden of establishing' it devolved upon him. Yet, notwithstanding its absence from the verdict, the lower court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff. This was error for which the cause was reversed. If the lower court had rendered judgment in favor of the defendant as it should have done in the case above referred to, and the plaintiff had appealed, there would have been no reversal, because there would have been no error upon which to predicate it.
A careful investigation of all the cases will show that in but few instances of the character of the one above mentioned, have the appellate courts of this State seen fit to prolong litigation by directing a new trial, after reversing a judgment upon a special verdict, and these only when the lower court has erred in rendering judgment, and the evidence showed that manifest injustice would result from directing the verdict in favor of the appellant.
In the case at bar the lower court did not err in rendering judgment in favor of appellee, and the cause cannot be reversed in the absence of error.
The judgment of the lower court is therefore affirmed.