Court Opinion

ID: 9666654
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 01:23:50.646993+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:15:31.632727
License: Public Domain

*692JONES, Justice
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent.
The scope of appellate review of an order granting a motion for a new trial following a jury verdict is in dire need of modification and clarification. This appeal presents a classical opportunity for such effort. Any re-examination of the guidelines for the exercise of the discretionary power of the trial court to set aside a jury verdict must begin with the premise that the right of trial by jury is constitutionally mandated. Substantive due process of law is violated when this fundamental right is infringed.
A full statement of the case, as well as the factual context in which the issue presented arises, is necessary as a basis for my reasons for differing with the majority.
Hubbard Brothers Construction Company, Inc., (plaintiff-appellant) claims damages against C. F. Halstead Contractor, Inc., (defendant-appellee) for work and labor done on account and for breach -of written contract. Halstead counterclaims for damages incurred in remedying the alleged defects in the work performed by Hubbard.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of Hubbard and against Halstead in the sum of $25,755.90. The maximum recovery allowable under the evidence, including interest, is $24,216.15. Thus, the award exceeds the maximum allowable recovery by $1,539.75. Hubbard attributes this excess to an inadvertent mistake by the jury in computing the interest due on the principal.
Hubbard now appeals, alleging that the trial Judge erroneously granted Halstead’s motion for a new trial.
Hubbard is a framing contractor and Halstead is a general contractor. Their contract called for Hubbard to furnish all of the labor and equipment necessary to perform the carpentry work on a 320-unit apartment complex known as the Cedar-brook South Apartments. Under the contract, Halstead possessed the right to terminate Hubbard’s employment should he fail to prosecute this work with diligence, efficiency, and promptness.
The controversy centers upon the end product of Hubbard’s workmanship on the apartments, which included, among other things, crooked and leaning walls, floors, roofs and cabinets. Hubbard, although he admits that such was the end result of his carpentry, attributes the defects to his being forced to build on foundations which were incorrectly poured and thus resulted in his poor work product. Hubbard also alleges that Halstead was informed of the defective construction of the foundation, but that Halstead directed him to do the best he could under the circumstances.
Halstead’s witnesses testified that it was quite common for foundations to be a “little off”, but that the foundations in question were off to such a small degree that any skilled carpenter could have corrected the problem with a minimum of effort.
On the whole, both parties presented considerable testimony and other evidence tending to support their respective position. At the close of the trial, the jury, as the trier of the facts, was faced with a situation in which the posture of the evidence made a verdict for either side equally possible. The sole issue presented for our review is whether the trial Court abused its discretion in granting Halstead’s motion for a new trial.
I would hold such a ruling was an abuse of discretion and reverse and remand this cause with instructions to enter an order overruling the motion for a new trial on the condition that Hubbard file within 30 days a remittitur equal to the sum in excess of the maximum amount of recovery warranted by the evidence, otherwise to grant a new trial.
Halstead’s motion for a new trial contained six numbered grounds which *693claimed the two following substantive errors under Tit. 7, § 276, Code:
1. That the verdict was contrary to the great preponderance of the evidence.
2. That the amount of damages awarded by the jury was excessive.
The power of a trial judge to set aside an improper verdict and enter an order for a new trial is inherent in courts of common law jurisdiction. Cobb v. Malone & Collins, 92 Ala. 630, 9 So. 738 (1891). In principle, this power provides a safety valve in the judicial system by allowing the court to avoid any potential injustice which may result from a jury’s bias, prejudice, passion, sympathy, or mistaken view of the merits of a case. Carlisle v. Miller, 275 Ala. 440, 155 So.2d 689 (1963).
It does not, however, grant to the trial judge an unbridled discretion to veto the verdict of a jury and substitute his own opinion on the weight of the evidence or the excessiveness of the damages. Johnson v. Howard, 279 Ala. 16, 181 So.2d 85 (1965); W. M. Templeton & Son v. David, 233 Ala. 616, 173 So. 231 (1937); Winter & Loeb v. Judkins, 106 Ala. 259, 17 So. 627 (1895); Cobb v. Malone & Collins, supra. To temper the trial judge’s potential to disrupt the well considered judgments of impartial jurors, guidelines of restraint have been judicially developed and interposed between the sanctity of the verdict and the power to grant new trials. These guidelines are to be used not only by the trial judge in gauging his own authority to grant new trials, but also by the appellate court in reviewing, the record for possible abuses of discretion.
In cases such as the instant one, where the trial judge gives no reasons for his order granting the motion for a new trial, the appellate court must affirm if any of the grounds set forth in the motion is sufficient. Johnson v. Hodge, 291 Ala. 142, 279 So.2d 123 (1973); Shepherd v. Southern Railway Company, 288 Ala. 50, 256 So.2d 883 (1970); City of Tuscaloosa v. Townsend, 274 Ala. 268, 147 So.2d 824 (1962).
Also, when a trial court grants a motion for a new trial without assigning a specific ground, this Court indulges the presump-tion that it was because the trial court concluded that the verdict was unjust in light of the evidence. Jones v. Strange, 289 Ala. 76, 265 So.2d 860 (1972); Boyd v. Shaw, 287 Ala. 26, 247 So.2d 116 (1971). We will, therefore, first address the issue of whether the ground that “the verdict was not sustained by the great preponderance of the evidence” is sufficient to grant the appellee’s motion for new trial.
The development of Alabama case law on the review of new trial orders generally, and of new trial orders based on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence especially, began with the 1891 case of Cobb v. Malone & Collins, supra. Prior to 1891, decisions granting or refusing new trials were not reviewable. Barr v. White, 2 Port. 342 (1835) and Spence v. Tuggle, 10 Ala. 538 (1846). At that time, a statute was passed (Acts 1890-91, 779 now encompassed in Tit. 7, § 764) which abrogated this rule and provided that decisions on new trial motions were reviewable by appellate courts.
Cobb was the first case to construe this statute and it has been relied on by many subsequent courts facing the issue of the scope of review of new trial orders. I believe, however, that the authority of Cobb is not universally applicable to every new trial situation and that some rethinking of its doctrines, as subsequently interpreted and applied, is in order.
Initially, it is important to note that Cobb was an appeal from a refusal to grant a new trial and the most carefully drafted portions of the opinion deal with that issue rather than the review of an order granting a new trial. On the limits of the trial court’s discretion, Justice Clopton, for the Court, first explains that the purpose behind the power to grant new trials is “to prevent irreparable injustice in cases *694where a verdict wholly wrong is the result of inadvertence, forgetfulness, or intentional or capricious disregard of the testimony, or of bias or prejudice, on the part of the juries . .
He then admonishes the trial judge that “in exercising the power, the court should be careful not to infringe the right of trial by jury, and should bear in mind, that it is their exclusive province to determine the credibility of witnesses, to weigh the testimony, and find the facts .... no ground of new trial is more carefully scrutined or more rigidly limited, than that the verdict is against the evidence.”
After this aspirational introduction, Justice Clopton explicitly states that “when there is evidence on both sides, or some evidence to support the verdict, it should not be set aside, because it may not correspond with the opinion of the court, as to the weight of the testimony, or because it is against the mere preponderance of the evidence.” This is a sound instruction, which is necessary to-prevent the trial judge’s unreasonable infringement upon the right to jury trial.
In the years since these statements of Justice Clopton, two rules have evolved to guide trial judges in granting motions for new trials. The first rule is axiomatic. If there is no evidence to support the verdict returned, a new trial must be granted because the case should not have gone to the jury initially. On the power of the trial judge to direct a verdict when there is no evidence tending to establish a party’s case, see: Stonewall Insurance Company v. Lowe, 291 Ala. 548, 284 So.2d 254 (1973); Tuskegee Auto Parts v. Dixie Highway Express, Inc., 276 Ala. 1, 158 So.2d 645 (1963); Alabama Produce Co. v. Smith, 224 Ala. 688, 141 So. 674 (1932).
The second rule involves the discretion of the judge in that narrow area of cases, where, although there was some evidence to support the verdict, the totality of the case indicates that the verdict returned was so greatly opposed to the weight of the evidence as to cause irreparable injustice. Water Works and Sanitary Sewer Board of the City of Montgomery v. Norman, 282 Ala. 41, 208 So.2d 788 (1968); Castleberry v. Morgan, 28 Ala.App. 70, 178 So. 823 (1938) ; Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Burkett, 207 Ala. 344, 92 So. 456 (1922). Both are good rules and worthy of reaffirmation.
The rule set forth in Cobb concerning appellate review of decisions refusing to grant new trials is also sound: “When the presiding judge refuses to grant a new trial, the presumption in favor of the correctness of the verdict is thereby strengthened.” Such a rule is the logical mandate of the policy to sustain jury verdicts unless they would result in irreparable injustice. Since the jury verdict alone is to be given such high credence, it follows that the concurrence of a presiding judge, who also had an opportunity to observe the demean- or of witnesses and examine evidence, must enhance the presumption that the verdict is correct.
The issue of the scope of review of orders granting a new trial was not before the Cobb Court and its summary treatment of that problem was mere dictum. The Court announced that “decisions granting new trials will not be reversed unless the evidence plainly and palpably supports the verdict.” In retrospect, this language was unfortunate because it has been misinterpreted to mean that the verdict must be greatly, or even overwhelmingly, supported by the evidence. A re-examination of the Cobb language immediately preceding this statement of the rule reveals that the Court expressly analogized the situation at hand to the prevailing rule in a non-jury trial. The common law rule for review of ore tenus trials was “not to reverse the finding, unless it is so manifestly against the evidence, that a judge at nisi prius would set aside the verdict of a jury, rendered on the same testimony.” Nooe’s Ex*695ecutor v. Garner’s Adm’r., 70 Ala. 443 (1881).
This is a reasonable rule to apply to the ore tenus trial situation because when a judge sits without a jury, then, he, like a jury, is the trier of fact. It is his opinion on the credibility of witnesses and comparative weight of evidence that determines the outcome of the litigation. The law, in such cases, .has entrusted the trial judge with two distinct functions. First, he is to use his common knowledge of human events and his sensory perceptions of evidence to determine, to the best of his ability, the true facts of the case. Then, he is to use the skills and learning of his profession to apply those facts to the law and thereby obtain a legal conclusion which is the judgment he renders.
The case at hand, however, presents quite different considerations. Here, the trial Judge has overturned the verdict of the ultimate trier of fact — the jury. His decision must be evaluated, not as the decision of an alternate trier of fact, which he is not, but rather as the decision of a presiding judge who is legally vested with carefully circumscribed discretion.
While case law application and interpretation has rendered Cobb’s ore tenus analogy unfortunate, I am convinced from the full context of the opinion, that Justice Clopton did not intend to formulate a double standard for review of new trial orders. The absolutism of the presumption of correctness of the trial court’s ruling whether to grant or deny a motion for a new trial is philosophically inconsistent with the sanctity of jury verdicts. On the one hand, the sanctity of the jury verdict is enhanced by the presumption favoring the trial court’s ruling in denying a motion for a new trial. But, where the presumption of correctness is so absolute as to render the power of review impotent, the trial court’s order granting a motion for a new trial effectively transfers this sanctity from the jury verdict to the trial judge.
The words “plainly and palpably” in the phrase “unless the evidence plainly and palpably supports the verdict” are the root of the problem. These words have been perverted into .a quantitative test for the weighing of evidence. Taken for their literal meaning and, in the full context of the Cobb opinion, they mean just what Webster’s dictionary says they mean, “easily perceivable to the mind”. By a mere substitution of the literal definition of the words “plainly and palpably”, the rule enunciated in Cobb may be otherwise stated : An order granting a motion for a new trial will be reversed for abuse of discretion where on review it is easily perceivable to the mind from the record that the jury verdict is supported by the evidence.
The legislative amendment of the statute interpreted by the Cobb Court — Acts of Alabama, 1915, p. 722, Tit. 7, § 764, Code —deserves comment. This amendment reads, “And no presumption in favor of the correctness of the judgment of the court appealed from shall be indulged by the appellate court.” By increasing the evidential burden of sustaining a jury verdict when a motion for a new trial is granted, the Cobb rule, as interpreted by subsequent cases, does exactly what the legislature explicitly stated shall not be done — it indulges a “presumption in favor of the correctness of the judgment of the court appealed from.”
It was my initial impression that the exercise by the Court of this legislative grant of power of appellate review of new trial orders should not be on a pick and choose basis, resulting in the abrogation of the conditions and restrictions implicit in the grant of such power. On further deliberation, however, I am convinced that this initial impression was erroneous. A grant of power of appellate review was an exclusive legislative prerogative. To exceed this prerogative and prescribe the scope of review is a violation of the separation of powers doctrine, and I am convinced that there is nothing inconsistent in the Court’s *696acceptance and exercise of this grant of authority of appellate review of new trial orders on the one hand and the rejection of the legislative conditions and restrictions respecting that review on the other.
Having said this, however, I believe the exercise of the judicial prerogative to prescribe the scope of review is clearly compatible (in its goal if not in its means) with the policy expressed by the legislative admonition of no presumption in favor of the correctness of the trial court. Before proceeding to a discussion of what I believe is a proper expression of this judicial prerogative, I would pause to emphasize that whatever degree of compatibility may exist between my concept of this scope of review and that which is legislatively expressed by the amendment referred to above is purely coincidental and is neither necessitated nor compelled by such legislative expression. It was the evident concern of the legislature that the unchecked power to grant new trials threatened to disrupt the jury system. This concern, implicitly ’ contained in the original- grant of the power of review and explicitly set out by the amendment, leads me in the same general direction, though I would seek the end result through somewhat different means. -
We start; then, with the proposition that, although the legislative attempt to prescribe the ground rules exceeded its prerogative, the judiciary in the rightful exercise of its prerogative as to the scope of review should aim for the same constitutionally mandated goal — preserving the right of trial by jury.
This does not mean that the “no • presumption” rule is necessary or proper to accomplish this result. Literally interpreted, the legislative proscription would have affected a de novo review, stripping the trial court of all discretion. I believe the correct rule lies somewhere between these two extremes. The rule long adhered to by this Court, and now reaffirmed by this opinion, in effect renders fut'ile all efforts to review an order granting a new trial where there is any evidence to support a verdict contrary to that rendered by the jury. Indeed, my research fails to disclose any such reversal in the Alabama Reports.
On the other hand, the legislative “de novo appeal” asserts the other extreme by proscribing any “presumption of correctness.” It seems to me that the extremities of each position decry its own incorrectness. I submit there is a middle ground, fully cognizant of the ultimate legislative intent and judicially protective of constitutional guarantees.
The correct rule, it seems to me, would recognize that motions for a new trial are generally addressed to the sound judicial discretion of the judge who presided over the trial; and, concomitant with this discretion, an order granting a new trial on a sufficiency or weight of the evidence ground would be favored with a presumption of correctness. But, consistent with the principle of judicial discretion generally, its exercise is subject to abuse, and its abuse is reversible upon review.
The guidelines for the exercise of this discretionary power to grant new trials are neither difficult nor novel in Alabama. The correct rule was eloquently articulated by Judge Samford in Castleberry v. Morgan, supra:
“when the trial judge sets aside the verdict, upon motion on the ground that it is contrary to the evidence, it places the judgment of one man, who is not charged with the duty of fact finding, against the judgment of twelve men, equally honest, equally obligated, whose duty it is to find the facts as to a particular transaction; and when the trial judge does exercise the power to set aside the verdict of a jury, it must appear, from the evidence, that the verdict was not only against the weight of the evidence, but so much so as at first blush, to shock our sense of justice and right.”
*697There is an implicit thread running throughout the majority opinion to the effect that logic requires the same presumption of correctness with respect to the trial court’s granting or denying a motion for a new trial on the weight of the evidence ground. I can only observe that the immediacy of logic is transcended by the higher constitutional admonition against infringement of the right to trial by jury. After all, logic, like beauty, is so often in the eyes of the beholder.
I would reverse and remand on the condition of a remittitur to comport to the evidence on the issue of damages.
HEFLIN, C. J., and FAULKNER, J., concur.