Court Opinion

ID: 7095647
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:10:40.553924+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:14.379106
License: Public Domain

Beck, Ch. J.
I. There was no error in overruling defendants’ motion to dismiss. The claim, which is the foundation of the action, is not joint, so that it cannot be prosecuted by one of the plaintiffs alone. There is nothing in the law forbidding the wife to withdraw from the action. The husband could continue it to recover for the damages sustained on account of the assault upon his own person.
II. The verdict being for plaintiff must be understood as a finding of the jury upon all the issues between the plaintiff to the action, as it stood after the wife’s withdrawal, and the defendants. Defendants’ counsel insists that it is not a finding upon the cross-claims of defendants against whom damages were not assessed. "We think otherwise. A moment’s thought will justify our conclusion. Suppose the verdict had been “ for plaintiffs,” simply, and no damages assessed against the defendants, or any of them. In that case it would have been clearly understood that the issues upon the cross-claims were found for plaintiffs. As to plaintiffs’ claim, in such a case, we may concede, but we do not pass upon the question, that there would be no finding. But, in that case, defendants could not complain, for they would not be prejudiced. There would be a judgment in their favor without a verdict.
Let it again be supposed that the verdict was “ for plaintiffs,” and damages assessed against all of defendants. In such a case there could be no doubt of the intention of the jury to find for plaintiffs upon the issues made on this cross-claim, as well as upon those arising on the petition.
In cases of this kind, when there are counter-claims or cross-demands, it is the usual practice to regard verdicts, expressing a general finding for one party or the other, as bearing upon all the issues in the case. We do not remember to have seen a verdict in which the jury returned a special finding as to the respective claims of the parties, unless for a proper reason they *565were directed so to do by tbe court. They consider tbe claims of the parties separately, and after allowing or disaEowing them, find a sum to which one party is entitled, and report that as the amount of their general verdict.
In the case before us, as to part of the defendants, the verdict is the same as in the first of the cases above supposed; as-to the others, it is as in the second. In neither instance have the defendants just ground of complaint, as the jury are authorized to find for a part of defendants and against the others. Rev., § 3077.
We conclude that the jury found adversely to the cross-demands of the two defendants against whom no verdict was rendered, and that their claims were adjudicated in the action.
III. The withdrawal by one of the plaintiffs of the action, as to her claim did not dismiss the cross-demand of defendants against her, and the issues thereon made remained to be found by the jury. Rev., §-3129. Rut no verdict was had upon these issues, and the case, as to her, remained undisposed of after the verdict. The district court so regained it, as appears from the abstract, and it is not shown that any disposition was made of it afterward.
But this condition of things does not vitiate the verdict in favor of plaintiff who prosecuted the suit. It is a final determition of the issues involved in his case, and the judgment thereon must stand.
The case upon defendants’ cross-demand against the wife, if undisposed of by subsequent action of the district court, remains to be determined there. As it may be considered that this appeal involves that case, a ¡procedendo will be issued requiring such further proceedings therein as are authorized by law. Affirmed.