Court Opinion

ID: 3410000
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 19:27:40.460358+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:50:34.040960
License: Public Domain

This is an appeal from a judgment for damages suffered by reason of an alleged breach of a contract of lease under which plaintiffs were operating in taking out ore from premises held by defendant. A motion to dismiss the appeal has been considered, and is denied.
Appellant specifies as error: (1) That the verdict and judgment are not supported by, and are contrary to, the evidence; (2) that the damages are excessive and the result of bias and prejudice and gross overestimate; (3) error in the giving of two instructions.
The specification that the verdict and judgment are not supported by, and are contrary to, the evidence has been held in many cases to be insufficient as a specification. However, no assignment or specification is made of error in the admission of the evidence complained of, but we are asked to weigh it, appellant especially contending the evidence of damage is "so unreasonable and opposed to common experience" that "if it were in no way contradicted. . . . it would not support any verdict or judgment." The gist of *Page 441 
this objection is that this evidence should not be believed. This calls for a weighing of all of the evidence of damage. This was distinctly the province of the jury, and they having found upon conflicting evidence, and there being substantial evidence to support the verdict, it will not be set aside. (C. S., sec. 7170.)
The instructions complained of are but excerpts of parts of complete instructions. One is a part of an instruction which was approved as a whole in Page v. Savage, 42 Idaho 458,246 P. 304. The other was not so wholly unrelated to the evidence and issues as to be improper, and could not in any event have prejudiced a substantial right of the defendant.
In order that a verdict may be held to be excessive and the result of bias and prejudice, this fact must be made clearly to appear from the evidence. No such showing appears here.
We find no reversible error. The judgment is affirmed. Costs to respondents.
Wm. E. Lee, C. J., and Budge, Givens and T. Bailey Lee, JJ., concur.