The statute of Tennessee which provides that "not more than two
new trials shall be granted to any party in any action at law, or
upon the trial by a jury of an issue of fact in equity," Code of
1884, 735, § 3835, having been construed by the courts of that
state to refer to a state of case where, in the opinion of the
court, the verdict should leave been otherwise than as rendered,
because of the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain it -- and
not to a case where there is no evidence at all to sustain it -- is
not in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution,
while the Fifth Amendment has no application to it.
It is settled law in this Court that when the evidence given at
the trial, with all the inferences that the jury could justifiably
draw from it, is insufficient to support a verdict for the
plaintiff, so that such a verdict, if returned,
Page 134 U. S. 615
must be set aside, the court is not bound to submit the case to
the jury, but may direct a verdict for the defendant, while, on the
other hand, the case should be left to the jury unless the
conclusion follows as matter of law that no recovery can be had
upon any view which can be properly taken of the facts which the
evidence tends to establish.
Motions to dismiss or affirm. The case is stated in the
opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Woodson sued the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to
recover damages for injuries sustained by him through its
negligence. The defendant plead not guilty. Upon the trial in the
Circuit Court of Haywood County, Tennessee, the jury returned a
verdict in favor of the plaintiff, assessing his damages at $3,000,
which on motion was set aside, and a new trial granted, upon the
ground that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence. A second
trial was then had, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff
of $5,000, which was again set aside, on motion, upon the same
ground. A third trial was then had, resulting in a verdict of
$3,000, upon which judgment was entered. And the record then
states:
"In this cause, on this, the 31st day of August, 1888, the
defendant moved the court to grant it a new trial herein, and to
arrest the judgment herein, because the verdict of the jury
returned herein August 30, 1888, was not supported by the law and
the evidence submitted, and because of error in his honor, the
trial judge, in allowing plaintiff to make proof of others than the
plaintiff swinging onto trains at other times prior to the day of
the accident, and of the habit of plaintiff and other boys in
swinging to moving trains prior to the day of the accident, which
motions are by the court seen and understood, and the same are by
the court overruled and disallowed. Thereupon the defendant
presented its bill of exceptions to the ruling of
Page 134 U. S. 616
the court in overruling its motions aforesaid and in overruling
its objection to the admission of the testimony aforesaid in the
progress of the trial, which bill of exceptions is signed by the
court and ordered to be made a part of the record herein."
Defendant prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court of Tennessee,
which was granted, and an appeal bond given accordingly.
The bill of exceptions sets forth all the evidence adduced upon
the trial, and the charge of the court in full. This charge is of
considerable length, and presented the case to the jury with
apparent care. It is nowhere therein states that there was no
evidence upon which the plaintiff would be entitled to recover. On
the contrary, it assumes that there was some evidence which would
justify a verdict for the plaintiff. It was said by the trial
judge, among other things:
"On the other hand, if you find the injury was the direct and
proximate result of the defendant's negligence or misconduct, you
will return your verdict for the plaintiff; or, if you find the
plaintiff was a child of tender years when injured, and that his
conduct and wrong did not contribute to the injury, but that he was
not possessed of such discretion and judgment, on account of his
infancy, as would reasonably be calculated to cause him to avoid
such danger, and you further find that the defendant might have
prevented and avoided the accident by the exercise of ordinary and
reasonable prudence and caution, then in that event you should
return your verdict for the plaintiff. The plaintiff would be a
trespasser if he was on the defendant's freight trains, or swinging
to one of them, or in the defendant's yard, or on its grounds,
trying to seize onto one of its cars. He would have no right to
complain of a clearance post or staub being located on the
defendant's track or roadbed if he was such trespasser, and
defendant had put up, or caused to be put up, such clearance staub
in its regular business. If you find that the defendant is a
corporation running freight trains on its line of railroad through
Brownsville, Tennessee, and that plaintiff, in December, 1881, was
a small boy, about six years old, and that he and other small boys
had been, prior to that date, for a long while, in the habit,
daily, of jumping
Page 134 U. S. 617
on and off of the freight and passenger trains of defendant
while they were in motion, and riding thereon in and about the
yards of defendant in said city, and that the conductors, brakemen,
and trainmen and agent of defendant at its depot in Brownsville had
knowledge of such practices and habit of the plaintiff and other
boys, and that the said conductors, agents, or brakemen or other
employees of the defendant willingly permitted and encouraged the
plaintiff to so ride on and jump on and off of such moving trains,
and that the agent or assistant agent of defendant and the
conductor of the freight train by which plaintiff was hurt knew
that plaintiff was at the depot or in the yards of defendant, or
near the train, ready and likely to try to jump on said train when
it might be put in motion, and that said train was so put in motion
and moved off, and that plaintiff was hurt by being thrown under
the wheels thereof while swinging to one of the freight cars or
while running along by one of said cars endeavoring to swing on the
same, and that no effort or precaution was taken by said conductor
or said assistant agent of defendant possessing such knowledge as
aforesaid, then in that event I charge you the plaintiff would be
entitled to a verdict for some damages against the defendant; and
if you find such to be the facts, you should return a verdict for
the plaintiff."
It is stated that the bill of exceptions is to the judgment of
the court in overruling the objections to the admission of
testimony, and also in overruling the motion for new trial and in
arrest of judgment. It does not appear that the court was asked to
instruct the jury as matter of law that no recovery could be had
upon any view which could be properly taken of the facts the
evidence tended to establish, and it is evident from the extracts
above given from the charge of the court that the trial judge must
have been of opinion that a verdict for the plaintiff could be
sustained upon some view that might be properly taken.
The railroad company assigned thirteen errors in the supreme
court of the state as grounds for the reversal of the judgment of
the circuit court. Nearly all of these questioned the rulings of
the court in relation to the admission of testimony,
Page 134 U. S. 618
and in different parts of the charge. The first error assigned
was in permitting, under the pleadings, the plaintiff below to make
proof of boys besides himself
"at other times prior to the one when plaintiff below was
injured, swinging to trains of defendant below other than the
freight train which ran over and injured him."
The second error was as follows:
"Because the proof introduced in accordance with the pleadings
wholly fails to show that defendant below was guilty of any
negligence whatever in running its freight train as alleged, at the
time and place alleged, over the plaintiff below, but, on the
contrary, shows that plaintiff's injury was the result of his own
gross negligence."
This second error, therefore, rested on essentially the same
ground as the first, in that it claimed there was a failure of
proof, if the evidence were confined to that contended to be alone
admissible under the pleadings. The thirteenth error reads thus:
"Because, from the uncontroverted facts in the record, the verdict
should have been for defendant."
The assignment nowhere specifically alleged that the circuit
court erred, as matter of law, in the entry of judgment, because
there was no evidence to go to the jury, nor is there any allusion
to the statute hereafter referred to.
The Supreme Court of Tennessee affirmed the judgment in these
words:
"This cause was heard upon the transcript of the record from the
Circuit Court of Haywood County, and the court adjudges that there
is no evidence to support the verdict of the jury, but the
defendant having obtained three verdicts of separate juries upon
different trials, two of which have been heretofore set aside by
the circuit judge, and now, alone upon this ground, the statute of
Tennessee forbidding the granting of more than two new trials in
the same cause on the facts, which statute is not in conflict with
the Constitution of the United States, Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments, it is considered by this court that said judgment be
affirmed, and that defendant in error, Eddie Woodson, by W. H. Lea,
as next friend, recover of the plaintiff in error, the Louisville
and Nashville Railroad Company, the sum of three thousand dollars
($3,000), amount of judgment of court below, and the costs of said
court,"
etc.
Page 134 U. S. 619
A writ of error was sued out from this court upon the ground
that the validity of a statute of the State of Tennessee was drawn
in question as being repugnant to the fourteenth amendment to the
Constitution of the United States, and that the decision was in
favor of its validity. A motion is now made to dismiss the writ of
error, and with it is united a motion to affirm the judgment.
In each of the Constitutions of the State of Tennessee of 1796,
1834, and 1870, it is declared that "the right of trial by jury
shall remain inviolate," and also that "judges shall not charge
juries with respect to matters of fact, but may state the
testimony, and declare the law." Const. 1796, Art. 11, § 6; Art. 5,
§ 5; 1834, Art. 1, § 6; Art. 6, § 9; 1870, Art. 1, § 6; Art. 6, §
9. The purpose of this latter provision was stated in
Ivey v.
Hodges, 4 Humphrey 155, to be to put a stop to the practice,
in summing up, of "telling the jury, not what was deposed to, but
what was proved."
In
Claxton v. State, 2 Humphrey 181, it was held that
where the court charged the jury that, if they should find a
special verdict which presented the testimony of one of the
witnesses as the facts of the case, he should declare it a case of
manslaughter, "this charge announced a conclusion of law upon a
hypothetical state of facts, and did not trench upon the
constitutional rights of the defendant."
And so, in
Williams v. Norwood, 2 Yerger 329, the court
decided that
"a party has a right to the opinion of the court, distinctly as
to the law, whether certain facts constitute probable cause or not,
if the jury believe the facts as stated were proved."
Since 1801, there has been upon the statute book of the State of
Tennessee the following provision: "Not more than two new trials
shall be granted to the same party in any action at law, or upon
the trial by jury of an issue of fact in equity." Acts 1801, c. 6,
§ 59, Laws Tenn. 1831, p. 229; Code 1858, § 3122, p. 590; Code
Tenn. 1884, § 3835, p. 735.
In
Trott v. West, 10 Yerger 499, 500 (1837), the
Supreme Court of Tennessee says that this statute
"means that where
Page 134 U. S. 620
the facts of the case have been fairly left to the jury upon a
proper charge of the court, and they have twice found a verdict for
the same party, each of which having been set aside by the court,
if the same party obtain another verdict, in like manner, it shall
not be disturbed. But this act did not intend to prevent the court
granting new trials for error in the charge of the court to the
jury; for error in the admission of, or rejection of, testimony;
for misconduct of the jury, and the like."
Turner v. Ross, 1 Humphrey 16 (1839);
East
Tennessee &c. Railroad Co. v. Hackney, 1 Head 170,
(1858).
In
Knoxville Iron Co. v. Dobson, 15 Lea 409, 416,
(1885), it is said that
"this court has uniformly held that the statute was intended to
limit the power of the courts over the findings of fact by the jury
upon regular proceedings and a correct charge. If the court, in the
same case, has set aside, upon the motion of the same party, the
verdicts of two juries upon the ground that the evidence is not
sufficient to sustain them, the power of the court is at an end to
grant another new trial to the same party upon the facts or merits.
The statute does not prevent the granting of new trials for errors
committed by the court or for improper conduct which may vitiate
the verdict."
Wilson v. Greer, 7 Humphrey 513.
In
Tate v. Gray, 4 Sneed 594, it was held that it is
the duty of the circuit judge "to grant a new trial in all cases
where he believes the preponderance of the proof is decidedly
against the finding," and that
"although, by the theory of our system, the jury are the proper
and exclusive triers of the facts, yet the law requires the circuit
judge, who is presumed to have more practice and skill in the
investigation of truth, to set aside their verdicts whenever, in
his opinion, they have disregarded or misconceived the force of
proof, that a new trial may be had."
From these decisions it is clear that in Tennessee, as
elsewhere, although the jury are the judges of the facts, yet the
judge has power to set aside the verdict when in his judgment it is
against the weight of the evidence, but that that supervisory power
cannot be exercised under the statute when the triers of the facts
have three times determined them
Page 134 U. S. 621
the same way. This manifestly refers to a state of case where,
in the opinion of the judge, the verdict should have been otherwise
than as rendered, because of the insufficiency of the evidence to
sustain it, but not to a case where there is no evidence at all. It
is the settled law of this Court that
"when the evidence given at the trial, with all the inferences
that the jury could justifiably draw from it, is insufficient to
support a verdict for the plaintiff, so that such a verdict, if
returned, must be set aside,"
the court is not bound to submit the case to the jury, but may
direct a verdict for the defendant,
Randall v. Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad, 109 U. S. 478,
109 U. S. 482;
Gunther v. Liverpool &c. Ins. Co., ante, 134 U. S. 110,
while, on the other hand, the case should be left to the jury
unless the conclusion follows as matter of law that no recovery can
be had upon any view which can be properly taken of the facts the
evidence tends to establish.
Dunlap v. Northeastern Railroad
Co., 130 U. S. 649,
130 U. S. 652.
In such case, the practice of a demurrer to the evidence can be
resorted to, or a motion to exclude the evidence from the jury, or
to instruct them that the plaintiff cannot recover, which motions
are in the nature of demurrers to evidence, though less technical,
and have in many of the states superseded the ancient practice of a
demurrer to evidence.
Parks v. Ross,
11 How. 362;
Schuchardt v.
Allens, 1 Wall. 359. Such a motion, like the
demurrer to evidence, admits not only what the testimony proves but
what it tends to prove. The ultimate facts, in other words, are
admitted. In
Bacon v. Parker, 2 Overton 57, 57, it was
decided that an involuntary nonsuit could not be ordered, but a
demurrer to evidence was allowed in
Bedford v. Ingram, 5
Hayward 155, and it must be that, as the duty devolves upon the
judge "to declare the law," he may be requested, in some form, to
advise the jury that the plaintiff cannot recover when that is the
conclusion of law arising upon the record, and should do so though
not specifically directed. It is true that it was held in
Kirtland v. Montgomery, 1 Swan 452, that it was error for
the trial judge to assume to answer both the questions of law and
the questions of fact involved in that case, which was one,
however, in which there was evidence
Page 134 U. S. 622
raising questions of fact to be determined, and in
Ayres v.
Moulton, 5 Coldwell 154, it was held error in the circuit
judge to charge the jury that from the facts as proven, the
plaintiffs were "entitled to recover of the defendant the sum sued
for," because "the facts to be deduced from the evidence must be
left exclusively to the jury." But that, also, was a case where it
evidently did not follow from the ultimate facts that the
plaintiffs were entitled as matter of law to recover as stated. To
the same effect is
Case v. Williams, 2 Coldwell 239, where
it was ruled that if the charge of the trial judge "be equivalent
to a determination of the facts involved a new trial will be
granted." This is and must be so whenever there are deductions of
fact to be drawn by the jury, but where that is not the case,
although a direct instruction to return a verdict for the defendant
may not be in accordance with the practice in Tennessee, yet the
decisions show that the question whether a recovery can be had at
all or not can be presented in some appropriate form in that
state.
Thus, in
Whirley v. Whiteman, 1 Head 616, it is
said:
"In trials by jury, the court is to decide questions of law and
the jury questions of fact. What are called 'mixed questions,'
consisting of both law and fact as questions in respect to the
degree of care, skill, diligence, etc., required by law in
particular cases are to be submitted to the jury under proper
instructions from the court as to the rules and principles of law
by which they are to be governed in their determination of the
case. The truth of the facts and circumstances offered in evidence
in support of the allegations on the record must be determined by
the jury. But it is for the court to decide whether or not those
facts and circumstances, if found by the jury to be true, are
sufficient in point of law to maintain the allegations in the
pleadings. And this must be done in one of two modes: either the
court must inform the jury hypothetically whether or not the facts
which the evidence tends to prove will, if established in the
opinion of the jury, satisfy the allegations, or the jury must find
the facts specially, and then the court will apply the law and
pronounce whether or not the facts so found are sufficient to
support the averments
Page 134 U. S. 623
of the parties. 1 Starkie, Ev. 447. The principles of law by
which the jury must be governed in finding a verdict cannot be left
to their arbitrary determination. The rights of parties must be
decided according to the established law of the land as declared by
the legislature or expounded by the courts, and not according to
what the jury, in their own opinion, may suppose the law is or
ought to be; otherwise the law would be as fluctuating and
uncertain as the diverse views and opinions of different juries in
regard to it."
Memphis Gayoso Gas Co. v. Williamson, 9 Heiskell 314,
341;
Gregory v. Underhill, 6 Lea 211.
Tested by this rule, whenever the statute is applied, it must be
upon the assumption that although the court would have found a
different verdict because of the weakness of the evidence, yet
there was some evidence tending to establish the cause of action.
Courts rarely grant a new trial after two verdicts upon the facts
in favor of the same party, except for error of law; and the
statute, in the interest of the termination of litigation, makes
that imperative which would otherwise be discretionary. For
decisions under similar statutory provisions,
see Silsbe v.
Lucas, 53 Ill. 479;
Ill. Cent. Railroad Co. v.
Patterson, 93 Ill. 290;
Carmichael v. Geary, 27 Ind.
362;
Boyce v. Smith, 16 Mo. 317;
Wildy v. Bonney's
Lessee, 35 Miss. 77;
Rains v. Hood, 23 Tex. 555;
Watterson v. Moore, 23 W. Va. 404.
We can perceive nothing in the statute thus applied which
amounts to an arbitrary deprivation of the rights of the citizen,
and concur with the Supreme Court of Tennessee that this act, which
had been in force for more than sixty years before the adoption of
the Fourteenth Amendment, was not invalidated by it, while the
Fifth Amendment had no application whatever.
The statement in the judgment of affirmance is that "the court
adjudges that there is no evidence to support the verdict of the
jury," and if this were taken literally, it would follow that no
recovery could be had, as matter of law, and we therefore suppose
that the language used indicates simply the opinion of the court
that the jury ought not to have found
Page 134 U. S. 624
the verdict that they did, and that the judgment of the court
below refusing to grant a new trial upon the facts would have been
reversed but for the existence of the statute, which made it error
to award it.
Knoxville Iron Co. v. Dobson, 15 Lea 409,
418. Assuming that the validity of the statute was drawn in
question, yet there was clearly color for the motion to dismiss,
and the case may be disposed of upon the motion to affirm. That
motion is sustained, and the judgment is accordingly
Affirmed.