Court Opinion

ID: 3494666
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:02:37.60682+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:09:26.423136
License: Public Domain

ON REHEARING.
Upon our original hearing of this trespass case it was reversed for the sole reason that the damages awarded for personal injuries, et cetera, were excessive. Contrary to the usual practice in this court no provision was made for affirmance conditioned upon remittitur of damages by plaintiff in a specified amount. Upon this rehearing plaintiff asks this court, if it still considers the damages excessive, to "state a sum to be remitted on condition of affirmance."
Review of this court's decisions will disclose that in cases wherein the only ground for reversal is that of excessive damages the established practice, with very few exceptions, is to afford opportunity for affirmance upon remittitur by plaintiff of a specified amount. This phase of our practice is desirable for obvious reasons. For example, a result which courts should seek to obtain is an expeditious end of litigation. Avoidance of retrials saves useless expense of relitigating, and it obviates the hazard of loss of material witnesses occasioned by delay. The accident in the instant case happened nearly four years ago. *Page 705 
The quotation of my Brother in his opinion on this rehearing from Lord Phillimore, in Lionel Barber  Co. v. Deutsche BankLondon Agency, L. R. (1919) A. C., 304, 335; quoted in Dimick
v. Schiedt, 293 U.S. 474, 481 (55 Sup. Ct. 296, 95 A.L.R. 1150), is clearly out of step with the established practice in this jurisdiction in so far as it purports to deny that courts have the power to order a remittitur as a condition of denying a motion for a new trial. But it should be noted that the court's opinion in the Dimick Case is in full accord with the practice in this jurisdiction, and is an outstanding authority confirming the power of courts to provide conditionally for remittitur. The question before the United States supreme court in the Dimick Case was the right or power of a court, as a condition of denying a plaintiff's motion for new trial because of claimed inadequacy of damages, to increase the amount of damages awarded by the jury, the defendant having consented to such increase. It was not a case involving the question of the right or power of a court to order affirmance conditioned upon remittitur. After an exhaustive review of early English decisions and decisions in the United States supreme court, Mr. Justice Sutherland, who wrote the opinion in the Dimick Case, said:
"In the light reflected by the foregoing review of the English decisions and commentators, it, therefore, may be that if the question of remittitur were now before us for the first time, it would be decided otherwise. But, first announced by Mr. Justice Story in 1822, the doctrine has been accepted as the law for more than a hundred years and uniformly applied in the Federal courts during that time. And, as it finds some support in the practice of the English courts prior to the adoption of the Constitution, we may assume that in a case involving a remittitur, *Page 706 which this case does not, the doctrine would not be reconsidered or disturbed at this late day."
And Mr. Justice Sutherland further added:
"The power to increase the verdict of a jury conditionally does not follow as a necessary corollary from the power to decrease it conditionally. * * * It is worthy of note that while for more than a century the Federal courts have followed the approved practice of conditioning the allowance of a new trial on the consent of plaintiff to remit excessive damages, no Federal court, so far as we can discover, has ever undertaken similarly to increase the damages."
In the instant case we are not at all concerned with the power of the courts "to increase the damages," but instead the question is the right to order remittitur conditionally. In cases too numerous to cite we have ordered affirmance conditioned on minimization of damages. It sometimes happens that this seems to be the only way in which courts can end litigation. Such an instance will be found in Mr. Justice POTTER'S opinion in Crippen v. Chatterton, 244 Mich. 451. The syllabus reads:
"Where an action for conspiracy to defraud has been thrice tried, and each trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, and on former review the Supreme Court held that there was testimony taking the case to the jury, the judgment for $60,000 is reduced to $30,000 and affirmed conditional on plaintiff's acceptance, or new trial granted."
Our practice in this particular does not result in depriving litigants of trial by jury. They have already had such a trial; and our affirmance of a jury's verdict conditioned upon minimizing damages is no more than a holding by this court that the record discloses plaintiff's right to recover and that the damages which should have been awarded are at least in the amount fixed by this court. The practice *Page 707 
is no different than in those cases wherein this court holds, as it often has, that the amount awarded by a jury is not excessive. For when we minimize damages we say no more than this: "If the jury had awarded damages in such an amount (instead of the larger amount that was awarded), the verdict would not have been excessive and in that amount it should be affirmed."
In the instant case the record is such that had the jury fixed plaintiff's damages in the amount of $5,000 it would have been affirmed as against appellant's contention that such amount was excessive. Our former opinion should stand affirmed in so far as we held therein that the damages awarded by the jury were excessive; but it should be modified as to both defendants by providing that upon remittitur by plaintiff of damages in excess of $5,000 within 30 days the judgment entered in the circuit court will be affirmed. Otherwise the judgment will be reversed and new trial ordered. In either event appellant will have costs of this court.
BUTZEL, C.J., and BUSHNELL, SHARPE, and McALLISTER, JJ., concurred with NORTH, J.