Broudy-Kantor Co. v. Levin

Sims, J.,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court.

In so far as deemed needful, the questions raised by the assignments of error will be disposed of in their order as stated below.

[1, 2] 1. Did the court err in giving the following instruction?

“The court further instructs the jury that should they believe from the evidence that the defendants, or either of them, committed the acts complained of in the declaration and that the said acts were committed in wilful disregard of plaintiff’s rights in order to illegally get possession of the property mentioned in the declaration, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover not only the determinable money loss which the evidence may show he sustained, but such exemplary and punitive damages as in their opinion are called for by the circumstances of the ease, and the jury are instructed that punitive or exemplary damages are damages which are allowed, when one party has injured the other in a wanton, wilful and oppressive manner, in disregard of his rights, as a warning to him or them and other persons to prevent them from committing like offenses in the future.”

There is no evidence in the record that Morris Broudy, one of the defendant partners composing the partnership of Broudy-Kantor Company, in any way previously authorized or subsequently ratified the wrongful conduct of such partnership complained of, and there is no evidence that S. Yaffey previously au*288thorized, and but little, if any, that the latter subsequently ratified the wrongful conduct of Moses Yaffey, trading as S. Yaffey; and admittedly neither Morris Broudy nor S. Yaffey took any actual part in such wrongful conduct. The only connection of these persons with the subject, which the record shows, is that they were both made and are parties defendant to the action, and that the former was one of the partners, and that the latter was the principal, of the aforesaid business firms, respectively.

The question must, therefore, be answered in the affirmative.

As said in Barrett Brothers v. Felie, 124 Va. at page 517, 98 S. E. 671: “It should also be observed that the judgment under review is against a partnership and rests equally upon W. E. Barrett, who knew nothing of the alleged trespass until after suit brought, and neither authorized nor ratified it. In these circumstances he was plainly not liable for punitive or exemplary damages.”

See to same effect Myers v. Lewis, 121 Va. 50, 76, 92 S. E. 988; Southern Ry. Co. v. Grubbs, 115 Va. 876, 80 S. E. 749.

[3, 4] That Morris Broudy and S. Yaffey, respectively, received benefit from the wrongful conduct, for which their respective firms are, under established principles, liable for compensatory damages, is immaterial upon the question of ratification by them of such conduct. See Myers v. Lewis, supra, 121 Va. 50, at p. 72, 92 S. E. 988, 995, and authorities cited. As there said: “* * the mere receipt of a benefit is not a ratification of the tortious act from which the benefit was derived, since ‘ratification never takes place without knowledge.’ ” We find nothing in conflict with this view of the subject in Peshine v. Shepperson, 17 Gratt. (58 Va.) *289472, 94 Am. Dec. 468, or in Franklin, etc., Co. v. Nash, 118 Va. 98, 86 S. E. 836, cited and relied on for the plaintiff.

In the instant case there is no evidence that either of the persons under consideration had any knowledge of the wrongful conduct in question prior to the time the action was instituted, or, indeed, even up to or during the time of the trial. We will say, however, that where, as in the instant case, the trial was upon- the issue made by the plea of not guilty, interposed by all of the defendants, any knowledge of the wrongful conduct acquired after suit brought would be immaterial upon the aforesaid subject of ratification, if the plea of not guilty was entered in good faith. For it would be most unjust to hold that a partner or principal cannot in good faith defend himself against a charge of liability in punitive damages for conduct of a copartner, or agent, after acquiring knowledge of what the conduct is subsequently to the institution of the suit, except upon pain of being considered as having ratified that conduct by the mere fact of making such defense.

2. Was the error in giving the instruction above mentioned harmful to the defendants Morris Broudy and S. Yaffey, so that it constitutes reversible error?

The question must be answered in the affirmative. Since, in view of this conclusion, a new trial will have to be had, we deem it best not to express our opinion in detail upon the amount of compensatory damages as to which we think it may be said that the verdict is supported by the evidence. We deem it sufficient to say that we are satisfied from the record that the verdict and judgment for $4,000.00 is in part composed of exemplary or punitive damages. Hence there is no escape from the conclusion that the instruction was harmful to the defendants just mentioned.

*290It follows as a necessary consequence, therefore, that the verdict must be set aside and a new trial granted, certainly as to the two defendants last mentioned. The next question we have to determine is this:

[5, 6] 3. Should we set aside the verdict and grant a new trial as to all of the defendants?

The question must be answered in the affirmative.

According to the early decisions on the subject, in this country and in England, if a new trial be granted to one defendant in an action of tort, where the verdict is a joint verdict against several defendants, it must be granted to all of the defendants. See note in 19 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 797—8; Bicknell v. Dorion, 16 Pick. (Mass.) 478; 1 Black on Judg. see. 211. Under this rule the court had no discretion in the matter. The modern decisions, in this country at least, almost if not quite unanimously, are to the effect that the trial and appellate courts have the authority to set aside such a verdict as to one or more defendants and to allow it to stand as to other defendants. Note in Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 798-9; Albright v. McTighe (C. C.), 49 Fed. 817; Pence v. Bryant, 73 W. Va. 126, 80 S. E. 137; Hayden v. Woods, 16 Neb. 306, 20 N. W. 345; Gross v. Scheel, 67 Neb. 225, 93 N. W. 418; Loving v. Commonwealth, 103 Ky. 534, 45 S. W. 773; Seeley v. Chittenden, 4 How. Prac. (N. Y.) 265; Pecararo v. Halberg, 246 Ill. 95, 92 N. E. 600; Railway Co. v. Gore, 106 Tenn. 390, 61 S. W. 777; Terpenning v. Gallup, 8 Iowa 74; Kansas City v. File, 60 Kan. 157, 55 Pac. 877; Moreland v. Durocher, 121 Mich. 398, 80 N. W. 284; Heffner v. Moyst, 40 Ohio St. 112; Railway v. Moore (Tex. Civ. App.), 119 S. W. 697; Sparrow v. Bromage, 83 Conn. 27, 74 Atl. 1070, 19 Am. & Eng. Cas. 796; Washington Gaslight Co. v. Lansden, 172 U. S. 534, 19 Sup. Ct. 296, 43 L. Ed. 543; Strand v. Griffith (C. C.), 109 Fed. 597. But, by the holding-*291of such decisions, such authority is to be exercised in accordance with a sound judicial discretion; and the verdict will be allowed to stand as against one or more of the .defendants, when it is set aside as to another or others, only where the court is satisfied there is no just reason for granting a new trial to those as to whom the verdict is allowed to stand.

[7] Where a joint verdict in an action of tort is set aside as to one or more of the defendants because there is no evidence of their guilt, and there is sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict as to the other defendant or defendants, and the jury have been properly instructed with respect to the measure of damages recoverable of the latter, the uniform practice in modern times is to refuse a new trial to them. But the modern practice seems also to be uniform, where the question has arisen, to grant a new trial to all of the defendants, if the verdict is to be set aside as to any one of them, where the jury have not been properly instructed as to the measure of damages. For in such ease, the question arises whether the jury would have returned a verdict' of the same amount against a portion of the defendants as it did against all of them, and the court can but feel that, as the jury have never been called on to render the verdict they have rendered against a portion of the defendants only, injustice will likely be done them if the verdict is allowed to stand as to them. Albright v. McTighe, supra, 49 Fed. 817; Washington Gaslight Co. v. Lansden, supra, 172 U. S. 534, 19 Sup. Ct. 296, 43 L. Ed. 543.

[8, 9] In the instant case, as appears from the erroneous instruction given as above set forth, as in the two eases just cited, the trial was had upon the erroneous supposition that all of the defendants were equally guilty and equally liable. No distinction was made be*292tween them in respect to liability for punitive or exemplary damages, and the verdict was given, as we must infer, upon the basis that the defendants were all liable for such damages. As said in the opinion in Albright v. McTighe, supra: “* * it would be yielding too much to a sense of justice to an outraged plaintiff and in some sense would be assuming the power and authority of the jury in affixing damages for the court to discharge one of (the defendants) and hold only two, when the jury had not had their attention called to the matter in that way. To invoke the rule of the separate liability of each and every one of several joint tort feasors for the first time in the trial of a ease upon the motion for a new trial and to enforce it by a ruling that one may be discharged after a verdict against all, may be lawful enough under some circumstances, but a court acting impartially towards all parties must feel a sense of injustice where it appears that neither in the declaration, the pleas, the arguments of counsel nor the charge of the court were the jury invited to give their consideration to that subject. * *. It is too much like a verdict by the court, (rather) than one by the jury, to take advantage of these technicalities by refusing two of the defendants a new trial which is given to another. * *” The opinion of the Supreme Court in Washington Gaslight Go. v. Lansden is to the same effect.

It is true that in the former of the cases just referred to there was evidence touching the financial worth of the partnership, which the plaintiff alleged was composed of the three partners who were sued as defendants (the partners constituting the only defendants), there being no evidence, however, as to the financial worth of any of the individual partners; and in the latter case there was evidence, improperly admitted as the court held, of the financial worth of one of the defend*293ants; and this feature of evidence present in those cases is urged in argument for the plaintiff as being the basis for the aforesaid holding of such cases. But it clearly appears from a reading of the cases that this position is untenable; the eases cannot be distinguished on that ground; their holding is based upon the broad principle aforesaid that the court in granting a new trial in the case of a joint verdict in an action of tort will grant it as to all of the defendants when not to do so would likely work an injustice.

[10, 11] 4. Did the trial court err in refusing the following instruction asked by the defendants?

“The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that the defendants consulted counsel with regard to the removal of the goods in question and acted upon the advice of counsel, that this fact would negative any wilful disregard of plaintiff’s rights on the part of the defendants.”

This question must be answered in the negative.

More is essential to entitle a defendant to rely upon the defense set up in the instruction in question than the mere consultation of counsel and the having acted upon the advice of counsel. The advice must have been of reputable counsel; it must have been bona fide sought; and it must have been given upon a full, correct and honest disclosure of all material facts within the knowledge of the party seeking such advice, or which should have been within his knowledge if he had made a reasonably careful investigation. Commander v. Prov. Relief Ass’n, 126 Va. 456, 464, 102 S. E. 89, and authorities there cited; Clinchfield Coal Corp. v. Redd, 123 Va. 420, 437-8, 96 S. E. 836; Forbes v. Hagman, 75 Va. 168; Cragin v. De Pape, 159 Fed. 691, 86 C. C. A. 559.

No claim seems to have been made in the instant case that the advice was not that of reputable counsel; but, *294while there is conflict in the evidence on the subject, there is testimony for the plaintiff tending to show that the advice was not bona fide sought and was not given upon the full, correct and honest disclosure which the law, as aforesaid, requires. As the case has to be tried again we deem it best to make merely this general statement without going into the details of the evidence on the subject. Such being the evidence the instruction as asked was properly refused.

[12, 13] In lieu of the instruction just mentioned, which was asked by the defendants and refused, the court gave the following instruction, namely:

“The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that the defendants consulted counsel with regard to the removal of the goods in question and acted upon the advice of counsel, that this fact may be considered along with all the other facts in the case in determining whether or not they acted in wilful disregard of the plaintiff’s rights.”

This presents the following question for our decision: 5. Did the court err in giving this instruction?

The question must be' answered in the affirmative.

In the first place, this instruction, in its omission of all mention of the essentials that the advice must have been bona fide sought and must have been given upon the disclosure aforesaid—two features which were material in view of the evidence in the case—falls precisely within the above condemnation of instruction No. 6 asked for by the defendants and refused by the court. Secondly, the language of the instruction given, in its direction that the fact referred to might be considered by the jury “along with all the other facts in the case” in reaching the determination mentioned, is so general in its terms that it in fact leaves the jury without instruction with respect to the specific defense upon which *295the defendants by their instruction No. 6 asked the court to instruct the jury and upon which they were entitled to an instruction embodying the correct rule on the subject.

[14] As held in Peshine v. Shepperson, supra, 17 Gratt. (58 Va.), 472, 484-489, 94 Am. Dec. 468, where the court is asked to instruct the jury on a material and vital point touching the damages recoverable involved in their consideration of the evidence, if the instruction asked is not in proper form, there is a duty upon the court, in such case, to properly instruct the jury on such point, because the failure of the court to do so “is calculated to mislead the jury.” Whether such a result would likely follow such failure of the court, so that such non-action would be reversible error, will, of course, depend in each case upon the character of the point involved and the evidence or lack of evidence bearing upon it. In the instant case that holding is certainly applicable and the error in this particular was reversible error.

For the reasons above stated in connection with the three questions first above disposed of, the verdict and judgment under review will be set aside and annulled as to all of the defendants and a new trial will be granted them upon all of the issues in the ease.

Reversed and new trial granted.