delivered the opinion of the Court.
Masury, the defendant in error, brought a suit in the Court of Law and Chancery of the city of Norfolk against the Merchants & Miners Transportation Company, to recover damages' for injury to goods shipped from Boston, Mass., to the city of Norfolk.
*41The defendant pleaded not guilty, and after the evidence was put before the jury upon this issue the defendant demurred and the jury assessed the plaintiff’s damages at $714.50, subject to the decision of the court. Thereupon tibe defendant moved the court to set aside tibe verdict unid grant it a new trial, upon tbe grounds that the verdict is contrary to tibe law and the evidence, that the damages are excessive, and that there is no evidence of the proper measure of damages upon which to base a verdict. The couirt set aside the verdict, but refused to grant a new trial. It awarded, however, a writ of inquiry to assess the damages, and entered a judgment that plaintiff should recover of the defendant “what damages he ought to recover, and that the amount of such damages should be assessed by a jury.” The defendant then, by its attorneys, after the refusal of the court to grant it a new trial, and before the jury were sworn to try the writ of inquiry, moved tibe court, to allow it to withdraw its demurrer to the evidence, and asked that a new trial should be granted it on the facts, both as to its liability and as to damages; but the court overruled the motion of the defendant and refused to 'allow it to withdraw its demurrer to the evidence. And thereupon the jury empaneled to asseSsi the damages found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff .for $404.10, upon which judgment was entered, and to tibat judgment a writ of error was awarded by this court.
A similar question was recently 'before this court, in N. & W. Ry. Co. v. Wilkinson, 106 Va. 775, 56 S. E. 908, but in that case a bill of exception was taken by tbe defendant in error to the ruling of the court setting aside the first verdict as being unsupported by tbe evidence, and this Court, bolding! that tibere was error in setting aside the verdiiot, and that the evidence was sufficient to support it, entered judgment upon that verdict in behalf of defendant in error; anld it was thereby rendered unnecessary to dispose of the question here presented.
The position of plaintiff in error here is that, in order to maintain a judgment against it, it was necessary to show that *42it had been negligent as a common carrier with respect to the goods committed to its care, that the defendant in error had suffered damage by reason of that negligence, an!d the amount of damage thus sustained; that in the case before uis these questions were so intimately blended that when, the testimony closed, being of opinion, that the evidence was insufficient to. authorize a jury to find a verdict assessing damages against it, it had interposed a demurrer to the evidence; that the jury had. found a verdict against it upon insufficient testimony, as it claimed, and that claim the trial court sustained, and the verdict assessing the damages was set aside.
Under such circumstances we are of opinion that after' the verdict was set aside defendant should have been permitted to withdraw its demurrer to the evidence, and that a new trial should have been awarded, both as to the fact of liability and as to damages. The insufficiency of the evidenlce to establish the damages awarded by the jury in their first verdict was the inducement to plaintiff in error to interpose a demurrer to the evidence, and if the defendant in error (.plaintiff in the court below) was permitted to introduce further evidence, tending to make out one of the necessary elements in hlisi case, it seems to us it Would have been nothing but equal justice to have permitted the same privilege to the plaintiff in error, who was the defendant in the court below.
We have been referred to no authority by counsel, nor have we been able to find any, either in any text-writer or in the adjudicated cases, directly hearing upon the subject.
The reference to 4 Min Inst. (3rd ed.), 922, (where it is said that according to our practice, “the jury i's not discharged, as in England; but they generally find a verdict subject to the demurrer to evidence. If the jury assess damages for the plaintiff, thus hypothetically, and upon considering the de-. murrer, the court, is of opinion that the plaintiff has cause of action, but that the damages are excessive, the verdict may he set aside, and a writ -of inquiry awarded,”) does not reach the *43essential merit of this ease, which is that the deficiency of the proof upon the measure of damages, alleged by the plaintiff 'in error and concurred in by the court, was the controlling influence which induced the plaintiff in error to demur to the evidence; and that opportunity oughit to have been afforded to it, as well as the defendant in error, to amend its case by the 'introduction of further evidence, if it could do so, or if the case against it was changed by additional evidence, giving it the choice of trusting its case to the jury rather than to resort under changed conditions to the demurrer to the evidence.
Por these reasons we are of opinion fhait the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial awarded.
Reversed.