CONCURRING OPINION
By BENNETT, J.Inasmuch ns the original question a'rgued by the appellant was the question of what change, if any, has been effected by the recent amendment of §12223-2 GC in the review of orders sustaining motions for a new trial, I feel that counsel is entitled to receive some statement of our conclusions on this subject, I accordingly give my own conclusions. I believe that the purpose of the authors of the amendment and of the Legislature itself in enacting it, may well have been to make a Common Pleas order which granted a new trial for any reason involving an exercise of discretion, reviewable by this court and reversible if we felt the court had been wrong in its decision as opposed to having committed an abuse ox discretion. If such was the purpose of the amendment I believe that the expression of the Legislature was inadequate to express and achieve the purpose.
Prior to the amendment the language of the Supreme Court, as well as of other Ohio courts, has generally been that the granting of a motion for a new trial was not reviewable in this court because not a final order, and considerable space in the books has been devoted to calling attention to the fact that the litigant had not finally lost his lawsuit but still haa another chance. While this has generally been the language used in refusing to review such an order, i>: has resulted in an a.nomalous situation due to the fact that the sustaining of a motion for a new trial was a final order when a deserved directed verdict had been asked and refused and also when the trial court had “abused its discretion” in granting the new trial, if the discretion was on a matter in the field of discretion, even though in both instances the litigant who lost the benefit of his jury verdict still had the same further chance. Trying to rationalize the doctrine into a rule of thumb, I believe it to be a true generalization to say that, prior to this amendment, the granting of a motion for a new trial was a final order in all cases in which the party winning the jury verdict was entitled to his verdict as a matter of law, including in that category all verdicts which the trial court could not take away from him on any ground involving an exercise of discretion, without an abuse of that discretion.
The same result to the litigants would have been heretofore achieved if, instead of saying that these orders granting new trials were not reviewable because not final orders, our Ohio courts had said they were reviewable but that no such order involving an exercise of discretion by the trial court would be reversed unless the discretion was abused. That is, the net result to the litigants would have been the same but the procedure would have perhaps been different in one respect, via., that the fact of the “abuse of discretion” would be determined by us on a motion to dismiss the appeal in the one ease and on a review of the order in the other.
And, despite the fact that in Ohio we have always dealt in the language of “final orders,” I am sure that the law of Ohio has s.jso been, as I believe it is in the Federal Courts and most other common law jurisdictions that the determination of no matter given by the law to the discretion of a trial court will be reversed or overthrown by a reviewing court unless that discretion has been abused. I accordingly feel that, assuming that the amendment is constitutional and that the order is reviewable, the law still is that no order of the Common Pleas Court granting a new trial on any ground involving an exercise of dis•cretion will be reversed unless an abuse of discretion is shown. The net result of the amendment therefore. in my opinion, is that we must now review such an order and then determine whether an abuse of discretion has occurred, where, before this amendment, we would properly have determined whether such an abuse occurred on a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the order appealed from was not a final order.
I believe that the granting of a new trial, without a statement of the ground on which it is granted, as in the present case, operates unfairly to the defendant-appellant. Conceivably, the trial court may have not acted on a question in the field of its discretion, but may have wrongly granted the new trial upon some misconception of law which we could have corrected on review. Llore, probably the court acted in Lilis case in the discretionary field of weight of the evidence. Reading the cold record, I am inclined to believe that in that field the twelve jurors were right and the court was wrong. But the subject matter of this *312esse, the contributory negligence of a six or seven year old child, is peculiarly one in which I cannot say that the court, who saw the child and the other witnesses clearly abused his discretion despite my opinion from the written record of the testimony alone. I accordingly concur in the judgment.
The constitutionality of the act was not raised in this case although discussed in argument. I may add, for whatever it is worth, that my opinion is that “theoretically” the statute is unconstitutional in its application to motions for new trial granted for reasons resting in the court’s discretion because it attempts to make reviewable something which was not understood to be a ‘judgment” in Ohio Jurisprudence in 1912. But, practically, it seems to me that, inasmuch as the only difference which the statute would cause, if constitutional, would be the procedural question as to when we would pass on the matter of the abuse of discretion, whether on review or on a motion to dismiss the appeal, it is probably not of enough importance to be dignified with the indictment of unconstitutionality.