1. The Seventh Amendment preserves the substance of jury trial,
and not the old form of procedure. P.
283 U. S.
498.
2. Where its requirement of a jury trial has been satisfied by a
verdict according to law upon one issue of fact, the Seventh
Amendment does not compel a new trial of that issue even though
another and separable issue must be tried again. P.
283 U. S.
499.
3. Where the practice permits a partial new trial, it may not
properly be resorted to unless it clearly appears that the issue to
be retried is so distinct and separable from the others that a
trial of it alone may be had without injustice. P.
283 U. S.
500.
4. Petitioner sued for royalties under a contract licensing the
use of a patented process of manufacture. Respondent counterclaimed
for damages alleged to have resulted from failure by petitioner to
perform a related contract to construct part of a plant for lack of
which, respondent said, it incurred expenses for storage and
suffered losses from several causes, including loss of anticipated
profits. There was a verdict for the petitioner on its cause of
action and for the respondent on the counterclaim.
Held
that, in reversing the judgment as to the counterclaim and
directing a new trial with respect to the amount of damages because
of error in the instructions concerning the measure of damages
under it, it was not necessary to disturb the judgment on the main
cause of action, but there should be a retrial of all the issues
raised by the counterclaim, because
Page 283 U. S. 495
the date of formation and breach, as well as the scope, of the
contract therein relied upon were left in such doubt by the record,
including the verdict, that the question of damages could not be
submitted to a jury independently of the question of liability
without confusion and uncertainty.
33 F.2d 521 reversed.
Certiorari, 282 U.S. 824, to review a judgment reversing a
judgment in an action on a contract and directing a new trial
restricted to the amount of damages on a counterclaim.
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner brought suit in the District Court for Maine to
recover royalties alleged to be due under a contract by which it
licensed respondent to use two "Cross cracking units," structures
adapted to the use of the "Cross cracking process" for increasing
the production of gasoline from crude oil. Respondent pleaded, by
way of counterclaim, in two separate counts, a contract by
petitioner to construct a "Cross vapor treating tower" for
treatment of gasoline, produced by the cracking units, necessary to
make it marketable. The consideration for this contract was alleged
to be the execution of the license contract already referred to and
of two related contracts, one by a third party for the construction
of the cracking units, and another by which petitioner guaranteed
that they would work. Performance of these contracts is
admitted.
Both counts of the counterclaim were based on the same series of
transactions. The first alleged a contract arising from an oral
proposal by petitioner's vice president
Page 283 U. S. 496
in January, 1926, to construct for respondent a Cross vapor
system treating tower, the cost of which was to be repaid by
respondent to petitioner if the tower functioned in a satisfactory
manner. This proposal was alleged to have been accepted by the
execution of the other contracts. The second count alleged a
written proposal of like tenor by petitioner to respondent,
accepted by respondent on February 6, 1926, and confirmed by the
later execution of the other contracts. Both counts charged that,
by reason of petitioner's failure to construct the treating system,
and pending the construction of a substitute system by respondent,
the latter was compelled to store large quantities of the cracked
gasoline awaiting treatment, resulting in four principal items of
damage: the expenses of storage; depreciation of the gasoline by
evaporation and other causes; the loss incident to shutting down
respondent's plant because of the lack of treating apparatus, and
the loss of anticipated profits from the sale of gasoline.
The jury returned a verdict on petitioner's cause of action, and
a verdict for respondent on the counterclaim, leaving a balance in
petitioner's favor for which the district court gave judgment. The
Court of Appeals for the First Circuit reversed because of errors
in the charge of the trial court with respect to the measure of
damages on the counterclaim, but, in directing a new trial, it
restricted the issues to the determination of damages only, 39 F.2d
521, following in this respect its earlier decisions in
Farrar
v. Wheeler, 145 F. 482;
Calaf v. Fernandez, 239 F.
795;
Atteaux & Co. v. Pancreon Mfg. Corp., 22 F.2d
749.
See also, adopting the same practice,
Original
Sixteen to One Mine v. Twenty-One Mining Co., 254 F. 630;
Thorpe v. National City Bank, 274 F. 200;
Chicago,
R.I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Stephens, 218 F. 535;
Fentress
Coal & Coke Co. v. Elmore, 240 F. 328;
Great Western
Coal Co. v. Railway Co., 98 F. 274;
Empire Fuel
Co.
Page 283 U. S. 497
v. Lyons, 257 F. 890, 897. This Court granted
certiorari 282 U.S. 824, to review the single question whether the
court below erred in thus limiting the new trial, upon a petition
setting up a conflict of the decision with that of the Court of
Appeals for the Third Circuit in
McKeon v. Central Stamping
Co., 264 F. 385.
See also Kean v. National City Bank,
294 F. 214, 226.
Petitioner contends that the withdrawal from consideration of
the jury, upon the new trial, of the issue of liability on the
contract set up in the counterclaim, is a denial of its
constitutional right to a trial by jury. The Seventh Amendment
provides:
"In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall
exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be
preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise
reexamined in any court of the United States than according to the
rules of the common law."
It is argued that as, by the rules of the common law in force
when the amendment was adopted, there could be no new trial of a
part only of the issues of fact, a resubmission to the jury of the
issue of damages alone is a denial of the trial by jury which the
amendment guarantees.
It is true that, at common law, there was no practice of setting
aside a verdict in part. If the verdict was erroneous with respect
to any issue, a new trial was directed as to all. [
Footnote 1] This continued to be the rule in
some states after the adoption of the Constitution, [
Footnote 2] but in many it has not been
followed, notwithstanding the presence in their Constitutions of
provisions preserving trial by jury. The Massachusetts courts early
modified it to permit a new
Page 283 U. S. 498
trial of less than all the issues of fact when they were clearly
separable.
Bicknell v. Dorion, 16 Pick. 478;
see
Simmons v. Fish, 210 Mass. 563, 565 97 N.E. 102. The rule as
thus modified has been generally accepted in the New England states
(
see Zaleski v. Clark, 45 Conn. 397, 404;
McKay v. New
England Dredging Co., 93 Me. 201, 44 A. 614;
Lisbon v.
Lyman, 49 N.H. 553, 582
et seq.; Clark v. New
York, N.H. & H. R. Co., 33 R.I. 83, 80 A. 406;
Parizo
v. Wilson, 101 Vt. 514, 144 A. 856), and consistently followed
by the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Lord Mansfield, in applying the common law rule where the
verdict, correct as to one issue, was erroneous as to another,
said: " . . . For form's sake, we must set aside the whole verdict.
. . ."
Edie v. East India Co., 1 W.Bl. 295, 298. But we
are not now concerned with the form of the ancient rule. It is the
Constitution which we are to interpret, and the Constitution is
concerned not with form, but with substance. All of vital
significance in trial by jury is that issues of fact be submitted
for determination with such instructions and guidance by the court
as will afford opportunity for that consideration by the jury which
was secured by the rules governing trials at common law.
See
Herron v. Southern Pacific Co., 283 U. S.
91. Beyond this, the Seventh Amendment does not exact
the retention of old forms of procedure.
See Walker v. Southern
Pacific R. Co., 165 U. S. 593,
165 U. S. 596.
It does not prohibit the introduction of new methods for
ascertaining what facts are in issue (
see Ex parte
Peterson, 253 U. S. 300,
253 U. S.
309), or require that an issue once correctly
determined, in accordance with the constitutional command, be tried
a second time, even though justice demands that another distinct
issue, because erroneously determined, must again be passed on by a
jury.
If, in the present case, the jury has found, in accordance with
the applicable legal rules, the amount due to
Page 283 U. S. 499
petitioner on the contract for royalties and all the elements
fixing its liability on the treating plant contract, there is no
constitutional requirement that those issues should again be sent
to a jury merely because the exigencies of the litigation require
that a separable issue be tried again. Such is not the effect of
Slocum v. New York Life Insurance Co., 228 U.
S. 364, which decided only that an appellate federal
court may not direct judgment
non obstante veredicto
solely because the verdict given is not sustained by the evidence,
but, in that event, must order a new trial. There it was held that
the Seventh Amendment does not permit the entry of judgment on a
trial at law before a jury upon an issue of fact without the
verdict of the jury. Here, we hold that, where the requirement of a
jury trial has been satisfied by a verdict according to law upon
one issue of fact, that requirement does not compel a new trial of
that issue even though another and separable issue must be tried
again.
As the issues arising upon petitioner's cause of action on the
royalty contract are clearly separable from all others and the
verdict as to them already given is free from error, it need not be
disturbed. But the question remains whether the issue of damages is
so distinct and independent of the others arising on the
counterclaim that it can be separately tried. The verdict on the
counterclaim may be taken to have established the existence of a
contract and its breach. Nevertheless, upon the new trial, the jury
cannot fix the amount of damages unless also advised of the terms
of the contract, and the dates of formation and breach may be
material, since it will be open to petitioner to insist upon the
duty of respondent to minimize damages.
But it is impossible from an inspection of the present record to
say precisely what were the dates of formation and breach of the
contract found by the jury or its terms. Different dates are
alleged in the counterclaim as that of the contract -- one,
February 6, 1926, the other the date
Page 283 U. S. 500
of final execution of the related contracts, fixed by some of
the testimony at March 20th. No date was set for performance, and
what the jury, by its verdict, found to be the reasonable time for
performance is not disclosed by the record.
The contract alleged was to construct a single treating tower,
but there was a sharp conflict in the testimony as to whether the
oral proposal was for one, two, or three towers. To pass on the
claim for loss of profits, the jury must know whether the contract
to construct was the extent of the undertaking, and, if so, the
number of towers to be built, or whether petitioner also agreed
that the plant, whatever the number of towers, was to be adequate
to treat all gasoline produced by respondent. In addition, the jury
must know whether there was a guaranty that the treating system
would work satisfactorily, or, of not, whether, in fact it would
have done so. But the present verdict, awarding as damages on the
counterclaim less than the total of the items claimed by
respondent, exclusive of alleged loss of profits, cannot be taken
as establishing any of these material facts.
Where the practice permits a partial new trial, it may not
properly be resorted to unless it clearly appears that the issue to
be retried is so distinct and separable from the others that a
trial of it alone may be had without injustice.
See Norfolk
Southern R. Co. v. Ferebee, 238 U. S. 269,
238 U. S. 274;
American Locomotive Co. v. Harris, 239 F. 234, 240;
Simmons v. Fish, supra, 210 Mass. 568, 97 N.E. 102;
McBride v. Huckins, 76 N.H. 206, 213, 81 A. 528;
General Motors Co. v. Shepard Co., 47 R.I. 153, 156, 130
A. 593;
Le Febvre's Administrator v. Central Vermont Ry.
Co., 97 Vt. 342, 358, 123 A. 211. Here, the question of
damages on the counterclaim is so interwoven with that of liability
that the former cannot be submitted to the jury independently of
the latter without confusion and uncertainty, which would amount to
a denial of a fair trial.
Page 283 U. S. 501
See Simmons v. Fish, supra. There should be a new trial
of all the issues raised by the counterclaim.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Parker v. Godin, 2 Strange 813;
Swain v. Hall,
3 Wilson 45;
Berrington's Case, 3 Salk, 362;
Bond v.
Spark, 12 Mod. 275.
[
Footnote 2]
Boswell v. Jones, 1 Wash. 322 (1794);
Gardner's
Administrator v. Vidal, 6 Rand. 106 (1828);
Sawyer v.
Merrill, 10 Pick. 16 (1830);
Tuttle v. Gates, 24 Me.
395 (1844);
Knowles v. Dow, 22 N.H. 387, 411.