Court Opinion

ID: 7971551
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:55:37.650654+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:47.325120
License: Public Domain

COLLINS, J.
Action in tort against two defendants; the verdict being in favor of one but against the other in the sum of $226.66. The court below then granted plaintiff’s motion for a new trial as to both defendants, and the latter join in an appeal to this court.
Plaintiff’s motion was based on the three grounds specified in the fourth, fifth, and seventh subdivisions of Gr. S. 1894, § 5398. There is nothing in the record tending to indicate upon which of these *219grounds tbe trial court placed its order, but it is evident that there was no reversible error in law occurring at the trial. The order appealed from must be affirmed. The appeal being taken by defendants jointly from an order granting a new trial as to both, must be affirmed as to both if it was right as to either. See Miller v. Adamson, 45 Minn. 99, 47 N. W. 452; McKasy v. Huber, 65 Minn. 9, 67 N. W. 650. And, without stopping to consider the merits of this case as to the defendant against whom the verdict was rendered, — which verdict, it is possible, should not have been disturbed, — it is obvious that as to the other defendant the evidence was not “manifestly and palpably in favor of the verdict” in his behalf. In fact; counsel for defendants concedes in his brief that “upon every question before the court on the motion for a new trial the evidence was about equally divided between the plaintiff and defendants,” and again, “Upon all the questions of fact entering into the verdict, an examination will show the evidence was conflicting and equally divided.”
It follows that, under the well-known rule (Hicks v. Stone, 13 Minn. 398 [434]), the order appealed from must be, and is hereby, affirmed.