Appellant sued for damages alleged to have heen caused by a fall received while attempting to alight from defendant’s street car. The charge is that the fall was brought about by the careless jerking or sudden starting of the car while appellant was in the act of stepping off. The answer was a general denial and a plea that her injury, if any, resulted from her own negligence in stepping from the car before it came to a stop.
At the September term, 1908, the case was tried before Judge Ramey and a jury, and a verdict was returned against respondent for $5700. This verdict was set aside by the trial court “for the reasons that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, and for misconduct of the jury in arriving at said verdict.”
Thereafter the- case was twice tried, once at the-May term, 1909, and again at the January term, 1910, each time resulting in a hung jury.
*374At the May term, 1911, the case was tried for the fourth time, and a verdict was returned for appellant •in the sum of $4000.
A motion for new trial was in due time filed, the grounds, of which, among others, were that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence; that it was so grossly against the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to shock the conscience and indicate that the jury was influenced by passion and prejudice and did not consider the evidence in the case or the instructions of the court; that the verdict was out of all .proportion to the injuries proved and was so excessive as to shock the conscience and indicate that the jury disregarded both the evidence and instructions and returned a verdict based on passion and prejudice rather than on the law and the evidence; that improper and unlawful methods were employed to induce members1 of the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff; that one J. Elliston made certain efforts to see and influence the jury in favor of plaintiff during the trial; that he had a list of the jurors and was endeavoring to reach them and improperly influence them in plaintiff’s favor, but that he failed to reach the juror he was attempting to reach when discovered; that, during the trial of the case, a certain man named in said motion, and who was friendly to and apparently deeply interested in plaintiff’s side of the case, was frequently in the court room observing the conduct and progress of the trial, consulting with persons interested in plaintiff’s case, and frequently talked with one of the jurymen, and that said actions and conversations so aroused the suspicions of defendant’s.officers that one of them went to the man and told him his actions had been observed and commented upon, and that they were not consistent with disinterested motives, and requested him to let the jury alone and not attempt, to interfere further in the case, but that said person did not comply with the request but continued to visit saloons and theaters *375with, said juror at night during the trial and before the rendition of the verdict; and that such facts were reported to the trial judge during the trial.
Various affidavits were filed in support and also in opposition to the motion for new trial.' Two of respondent’s affidavits, stating that neither respondent nor its attorneys learned of the attempt of said Elliston to reach or influence the jury until after the verdict was returned, were not filed within the time allowed by the court for filing affidavits. And objection is made by appellant to said two affidavits for that reason. These two were filed before the motion was passed on, and by permission of the court. It being within the discretion of the court whether he should •allow them to be filed and considered, and he having done so, his action in that regard cannot be reviewed by us.
After having said motion for new trial under advisement for some time, the trial judge sustained the same, and had his reasons therefor entered of record as follows:
“All the points presented by the defendant in this motion for a new trial are overruled, except that the court says as follows:
That the verdict in this case is against the weight of the evidence, both as to the injuries and as to the facts creating a liability. However, a verdict in this case has been set aside once before on the ground that it was against the weight of the evidence, and the court would not disturb the verdict on that ground except for the fact that a party by the name of Jay Elliston, on behalf of the plaintiff, made an attempt to influence one of the jurors; that he did not reach the juror that he attempted to influence, but that he had with him a card to which he referred, upon which he apparently had the names of several persons, presumably jurors; that he was making an effort to influence this juror on behalf of the plaintiff, and the circum*376stances are so suspicious with reference to this party, Mr. Elliston, that in view of the fact that this verdict is against the weight of the evidence and in view of these suspicious circumstances with reference to the jury, the court sets this verdict aside. The juror attempted to be influenced was Juror Kendall, who did not sign the verdict.” Prom the order granting defendant a new trial, plaintiff appealed.
Appellant’s contention is that the court had no .right to grant a second new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. The trouble with this contention is that it assumes that the circuit judge set the verdict aside on this ground. But did he set it aside because the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, or did he set it aside because of the alleged attempts to influence the jury “and in view of these suspicious circumstances with reference to the juryf” It cannot be denied that, in expressing his reason for granting a new trial, the judge was not as clear, precise and accurate as he might have been; and therein he has caused us much trouble. At first glance it would seem, in reading the reason given, that the judge is really setting aside the verdict on the ground that it is against the weight of the evidence and has seized on the conduct of Elliston as a means of getting around the statute forbidding another new trial. But we cannot impute such conduct or motive to him unless his language is so plain as to admit of no other construction. And a slight analysis shows that his language will not bear such an unhappy interpretation.
A reasonable interpretation of the trial court’s language shows that he set the verdict aside because of the “suspicious circumstances” and the improper influences felt by the judge to be in the atmosphere. And he considered the fact that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, both as to the facts creating liability and as to the injuries, only as a strong *377circumstance going to show that all was not right, and consequently in the interest of justice, he felt that he ought to set the verdict aside. He did not set it aside because the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, but because he had, to his mind, positive proof that improper influences had been exerted, and he considered the verdict against the evidence as a circumstance convincing him that the improper influences had been successful. In such case what right have we for disturbing his action on appeal? If his suspicion of improper influences being exerted and reaching their mark have a basis in fact and not in mere wild fancy, and is so strong as to lead him in the exercise of judicial discretion to set the verdict aside on account thereof, can we interfere with such discretion in the absence of a showing that it was unsoundly exercised? If we do, then we establish a precedent that although a circuit judge has grounds for thinking things are not right in a trial before him and sets aside a verdict on account of improper influences surrounding the trial, yet the appellate court will undertake the.task of reviewing his action although it is within his discretion and, so far as we are able to tell, he has soundly exercised it. This would be a dangerous precedent to establish. No one is in a better position than the trial judge to know what is in the air and what is going on from the facts laid before him.
We must remember that this is a case where the judge sustained the motion. That is, he was so impressed with the existence of the matters calling for a new trial that he granted it. It is not a case where the judge has considered the matters and, in the exercise of his own best judgment, has overruled the motion. If that were the case, we could readily say that the suspicious circumstances were not sufficient to overturn the verdict since the trial judge found they were not. In other words, if the trial judge exercised his judgment and discretion and found no reason for setting *378the verdict aside, that ruling ought not to he disturbed by an appellate court whose judges do not see the witnesses, nor hear the trial, nor feel the atmosphere surrounding it, nor perceive the circumstances suspicious or otherwise attendant thereon. But, on the other hand, if the trial judge does think the verdict should he set aside, ought not the appellate court to defer also to his discretion, when he exercises it, in granting a new trial? "We think we should, unless the facts on which he bases his action are so utterly insufficient as to show that the discretion he exercised was wholly unsound. In Allen v. Railroad, 167 Mo. App. 498, 151 S. W. 762, Judge Nixon of the Springfield Court of Appeals said:
“The rule has been announced in Missouri, with wearisome repetition, that trial judges have a wide discretion in granting new trials, in order to accomplish justice; that the duty of granting a new trial rests peculiarly and specially within the sound discretion of the trial judge; and that when a new trial has been granted the appellate court will reluctantly interfere, unless it is manifest and apparent that the judicial discretion of the trial judge has been abused, or that injustice has been done. [Parker v. Britton, 133 Mo. App. 274, 113 S. W. 259: Lee v. Knapp & Co., 137 Mo. 385; 38 S. W. 1107; Kuenzel v. Stevens, 155 Mo. 280, 56 S. W. 1076; Iron Mountain Bank v. Armstrong, 92 Mo. 265, 4 S. W. 720; Ensor v. Smith, 57 Mo. App. 584.] Where a new trial is granted by the court below, an appellate court will look at it with less scrutiny than if it had been refused. [Bloch Queensware Co. v. Smith-Saxton & Co., 107 Mo. App. 13, 80 S. W. 592; Udden v. O’Reilly, 180 Mo. 650, 79 S. W. 691.]” As the case now before us is one where the trial judge sustained the motion, the cases cited as holding certain conduct to he insufficient grounds on which to reverse the trial judge’s action are hardly applicable.
*379But it is urged that section 2023, Revised Statutes of Missouri 1909, forbids the granting of more than-one new trial, and there having been one new trial granted heretofore, this precludes the granting, of a second new trial. That section reads as follows: “Only one new trial shall be allowed to either party except, first, where the triers of fact shall have erred in matters of law, second, when the jury shall have been guilty of misbehavior.” This undoubtedly means that there is no limitation on the granting of a second new trial if either one of them is granted on grounds stated in the first or second exceptions contained in the statute. In Kreis v. Railroad, 131 Mo. 533, it was held that this section did not forbid the granting of one new trial to either party on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence regardless of the number of new trials that may have been granted such party on other grounds. In fact, by the very terms of the statute, if the new trial is granted on grounds contained in*either the first or second exceptions mentioned in the statute, then the limitation of the statute to one new trial does not apply.
Now it is held in a number of cases that a verdict may be so contrary to the evidence as to amount, in legal effect, to misbehavior on the part of the jury or may “be regarded as springing from improper motives and should not be permitted to stand in any event.” [McGraw v. O’Neill, 123 Mo. App. 691, l. c. 705; Chlanda v. Transit Co., 213 Mo. 244, l. c. top of page 264; Partello v. Railroad, 217 Mo. 645, l. c. 661.] In Baker v. Stonebraker’s Admrs., 36 Mo. 345, it is said that a verdict may be so greatly against the evidence “as to imply some gross partiality, or some prejudice or misconduct on the part of the jury.” [See, also, Price v. Evans, 49 Mo. 396; Spohn v. Mo. Pacific Ry. Co., 87 Mo. 74, l. c. 84; Rigby v. St. Louis Transit Co., 153 Mo. App. 330, l. c. 335.]
*380So that, when the trial judge in this case says the verdict is against the evidence both as to the facts constituting liability and also as to the injuries sustained, and, as one new trial has been granted on that ground, he cannot set the verdict aside for that reason; but that, on account of the efforts to improperly influence the jury axid in view of the “suspicious circumstances with reference to the jury” he sets the verdict aside, this in reality is saying that improper influences were exerted and that they are shown to be successful by the verdict rendered contrary to the evidence. In other words, this is, in fact, a declaration on the part of the trial court that not only was there misbehavior on the part of the persons attempting to influence the jury, but that there was also misbehavior on the part of the jury in.listening to these suggestions and bringing in such a verdict. In such case, the statute is no barrier to the granting of a new trial. Because if, in granting a new trial the second time, the judge thought and had good, reason to think that improper influences had been brought to bear on the jury, and, in addition to the “suspicious circumstances” discernible by him, he took into consideration a verdict which was not only contrary to the evidence as to how the injury occurred but which was also returned in disregard of the evidence as to the extent of the injuries sustained, then the statute would not forbid the granting of another new trial. In such case the returning of a verdict thus regarded by the circuit judge after a trial in which he saw “suspicious circumstances ’ ’ would, in legal effect, constitute such misconduct as to bring the ease within the second exception mentioned by the statute. And unless the statute plainly forbids the granting of the second new trial, the case should be affirmed. Because, where a verdict is set aside by the trial judge for reasons like the present case, sound public policy requires that his action be upheld if possible. The strongest deterrent against *381improprieties of every sort is the knowledge that their inevitable result, if they are discovered, will be to undo all that is sought to be accomplished.
It will not do to say that because affidavits were filed showing that Elliston failed to reach the juror he was caught attempting to reach, and because affidavits were also filed explaining that the association with one of the other jurors was perfectly innocent and that nothing was said to him about the case, and because the court was unable to obtain affirmative proof to the contrary, therefore the court is compelled to overrule the motion for new trial. Defendant complained of this conduct and requested that it cease while the trial lasted. This request was reasonable and proper and should have been instantly and heartily complied with. The fact that it was not complied with served rather'to increase the litigant’s suspicion than to allay it. As said by a distinguished jurist, “The appearance of justice is almost as important as the substance of it in the conduct of trials.” The sanctity and purity of proceedings in courts of justice should be above suspicion. The same standard should be maintained in them as Caesar demanded in the reputation of his wife. To say that a litigant has no ground of complaint if affidavits are filed denying anything improper, is as unreasonable as to say that a husband cannot complain of improper appearances in the association of another man with his wife provided they both assure him that nothing wrong has been done. And when the trial judge says that he is not satisfied that there was nothing wrong, but on the contrary believes there was, and that another trial should' be granted on that account, shall we say to him that he is wrong?
A careful reading of the entire record in the case, done, not for the purpose of weighing the testimony or of coming to a conclusion as to whether there was corruption in the case, or whether there was improper *382influences exertód upon the jury, but to see whether or not the trial judge abused his discretion, will convince a disinterested person that there is a sufficient showing to justify the trial court’s action. The trial court has exercised his discretion and judgment and lias granted a new trial. His action should be affirmed since it does not appear that he has clearly abused that discretion.
As a matter of justice it should be said that the ’■ecord shows that, if anything improper did reach the jury, the attorneys in the case were in no way responsible therefor nor cognizant thereof, or of any attempt in that direction. We do not think that, even by implication, it should be inferred that they were in any way to blame for whatever did occur.
Neither is there an affirmative showing of any connection of plaintiff with such improper efforts. And the point is made that since the attorneys knew nothing of anything wrong, and no relation of Elliston with plaintiff was made to affirmatively appear, therefore, plaintiff ought not to be punished by having her judgment set aside on account of any improper efforts having been attempted by him. The first answer to this is that the judgment was not set aside as a punishment to anyone, but because the trial court thought that, under the circumstances, it ought not to stand. The only one to suffer punishment was Elliston whom the trial court sent to jail for contempt. The next answer is that, if the trial judge had good reason to think matters were not right and he set aside the verdict because of that belief, and the rule shall be established that nevertheless his action will not be upheld unless he can positively and affirmatively trace a corrupt intention direct to the party most deeply interested, then the trial court’s power to keep the founts of justice pure and unpolluted will be greatly weakened and almost destroyed.
*383The order granting a new trial shonld.be affirmed.
Ellison, P, J., concurs. Johnson, J., dissents.Cause certified to Supreme Court.