Court Opinion

ID: 3834530
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:04:20.969246+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:15.268911
License: Public Domain

This suit was commenced in the district court of Bryan county in August, 1910, by Mrs. C. A. Fisher against the St. Louis  
San Francisco Railroad *Page 752 
Company for damages sustained from injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant while plaintiff was alighting from defendant's passenger train at Platter, Okla., May 22, 1910. The cause was tried to a jury in May, 1911, resulting in a verdict in favor of the defendant railroad company. Whereupon plaintiff filed motion for a new trial, which was overruled. Thereafter, at the same term of court, plaintiff filed a second motion for a new trial, which was granted, and from the order granting a new trial the railroad company appealed.
The only question involved is whether the court abused its. discretion in setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial. The doctrine of this court has been that trial courts must necessarily be vested with a reasonable range of discretion in granting or refusing new trials, and where a new trial is granted it has been the rule to affirm such order unless there appears to have been a clear abuse of discretion or misapplication of law.
In Sharp v. Choctaw Ry.   Lighting Co., 34 Okla. 730,126 P. 1025, in opinion rendered August 20, 1912, by Sharp, C., of Division No. 1, wherein all the authorities on this question from this court and from the courts of Kansas are collated, it was held:
"Where a new trial has been granted, both parties have another opportunity to have a fair and impartial trial upon the merits of the action; but where a new trial has been refused, the matter is ended, unless a reversal can be had. And where the court grants a new trial, and it does not affirmatively appear that the same was upon some pure, simple, and unmixed question of law, its decision is of controlling force on appeal, and this court will in such cases reverse only where the trial court has clearly abused its discretion."
The decision of the court below was not based wholly upon an unmixed question of law. There was a controverted question of fact upon which there was conflicting testimony. The court necessarily had to pass upon such fact in order to determine whether the statute on new trials was applicable; and *Page 753 
having passed upon same and determined thereupon that the plaintiff was entitled to a new trial under the statute, in view of the well-settled doctrine of this court, the order will not be disturbed. Ten Cate v. Sharp, 8 Okla. 300, 57 P. 645;Yarnell v. Kilgore, 15 Okla. 591, 82 P. 990; Trower v.Roberts, 17 Okla. 641, 89 P. 1113; Citizens' State Bank v.Chattanooga State Bank, 23 Okla. 767, 101 P. 1118; Farmers'  Merchants' Nat. Bank v. School District No. 56 et al.,25 Okla. 284, 105 P. 641; Duncan v. McAlester-Choctaw Coal Co.,27 Okla. 427, 112 P. 982; Hogan et al v. Bailey, 27 Okla. 15,110 P. 890; Nat. Refrigerator   Butchers' Supply Co. v.Elsing, 29 Okla. 334, 116 P. 790; Jacobs v. City of Perry,29 Okla. 743, 119 P. 243; Chapman v. Mason et al., 30 Okla. 500,120 P. 250; Stapleton v. O'Hara, 33 Okla. 79, 124 P. 55;Jamieson v. Classen Co., 33 Okla. 77, 124 P. 67; ArdmoreLodge No. 9, I. O. O. F., v. Dawson, 33 Okla. 37, 124 P. 66;Davis v. Stillwell, 32 Okla. 757, 124 P. 74; Anthony v.Eddy, 5 Kan. 127; Field v. Kinnear, 5 Kan. 233, 238; Owen v.Owen, 9 Kan. 91; Atyeo v. Kelsey, 13 Kan. 212; Brown v.Atkinson, etc., Railway Co., 29 Kan. 186; City of Sedan v.Church, 29 Kan. 190; McCreary v. Hart et al., 39 Kan. 218, 17 P. 839; Sanders v. Wakefield, 41 Kan. 11, 20 P. 518; Willisv. Wyandotte Co., 86 Fed. 872, 30 C. C. A. 445. Also, St. L.  S. F. R. Co. v. Card, ante, 132 P. 144.
Therefore, following the rule so often announced in the foregoing cases, the order of the trial court granting a new trial is affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered. *Page 754