Defendant Schneider is a logistics firm — a firm that manages the flow and storage of goods, in order to meet a customer’s requirements. A branch of Schneider’s business was and we assume still is located near Savannah, Georgia. Freight entering the port of Savannah was trucked to Schneider’s building, unloaded on one side, sorted, and then reloaded on the other side of the building onto outgoing trucks; such reloading is called in the trade “cross docking.” Prime, the plaintiff, sought to do the cross-docking work and after multiple discussions was hired by Schneider to do so. Prime was to be paid for what it moved. It was paid, but for the most part not paid timely and not paid enough to break even, let alone make a profit, and it complained about that and also about a lack of communication from Schneider concerning assignments to Prime and support for its labors. The final straw for Prime was Schneider’s failure— without explanation — to pay Prime *635$82,464.71 for services that Prime had rendered to it. Not being paid, Prime removed its employees from Schneider’s Savannah building; and eventually brought this suit for the money it claimed to be owed, which had now climbed, according to Prime and not contested by Schneider, to $289,059.95. Schneider responded that Prime’s repudiation of the contract by removing its employees from Schneider’s building had caused Schneider damages of $853,401.49, amounting to a net loss to that company of $564,341.54 ($853,401.49 - $289,059.95). The case went to the jury on Schneider’s counterclaim. The jury was asked to answer two questions. The first was whether Prime had repudiated its contract with Schneider, and the second was, if so, what Schneider’s damages were. The jury answered yes to the first question, zero to the second.
Schneider moved for a new trial under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59, limited to damages. Rule 59, though vague (see subsection (a)(1)) has been interpreted to give a trial judge “ample power to prevent what he considers to be a miscarriage of justice. It is his right, and indeed his duty, to order a new trial if he deems it in the interest of justice to do so.” Juneau Square Corp. v. First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee, 624 F.2d 798, 806 n. 11 (7th Cir. 1980). That of course is imprecise; “interest of justice” is so vague that read literally it would give the judge carte blanche to set aside a jury verdict. And that can’t be right; a judge can’t set aside a jury verdict just because had he been a member of the jury he would have voted for a different verdict. Such a power would emasculate the jury system. As explained in Latino v. Kaizer, 58 F.3d 310, 315 (7th Cir. 1995), a judge is permitted to grant a new trial because the jury’s verdict was against the weight of the evidence “only when the record shows that the jury’s verdict resulted in a miscarriage of justice or where the verdict ... cries out to be overturned or shocks our conscience.” The judge in this case did set aside the jury verdict, ordered a new trial before a different jury, and submitted only the issue of damages (question number 2 in the first trial) to that jury, which awarded Schneider $853,401.49'in damages. After the court accounted for Prime’s uncontested losses, however, Schneider’s award was reduced to $564,341.54. But the judge was wrong to set aside the first verdict, odd though it was. He thought the first jury had contradicted itself by finding that Prime had repudiated its agreement with Schneider yet awarding Schneider no damages for the repudiation. But a rational jury could find that a zero damages award would (in the language of the second question posed to the jury) fairly compensate Schneider; to put it more bluntly, the jury could find that Schneider deserved no more. The first jury may have concluded that Schneider had failed to mitigate its damages. It may have thought that had Schneider simply paid Prime what it owed it, Prime would have returned to work and Schneider would have avoided incurring any damages. The jury was not told that Schneider was entitled to damages despite its having made no attempt to resolve the payment dispute with Prime. The judge overlooked this possibility, a legally sufficient basis for the first jury’s refusal to award any damages to Schneider.
Notice too that dealing .with a much smaller firm (Prime’s quarterly revenues most likely never exceeded $1 million, while Schneider’s parent company had operating revenues of $1 billion in the first quarter of 2017, see “Schneider National, Inc. Reports First Quarter 2017 Results,” Business Wire, May 11, 2017, www. businesswire.com/news/home/ 20170511005293/en/), Schneider had undoubtedly hurt little Prime more by failing *636to pay on time the $289,059.95 it owed Prime than Prime had hurt Schneider by causing it to pay $853,401.49 more for the cross-docking work than it would have had Prime not repudiated the contract, spread out over a few months — peanuts to such a large firm. And finally in the second trial the judge had arbitrarily excluded evidence favorable to Prime, such as Schneider’s failure to make timely payment of the money owed Prime, and the relative size and financial condition of the two firms. In short, the first verdict, awarding no damages to Schneider, was reasonable, and we hereby instruct the district court to reinstate it and order the second verdict and the judgment entered in conformity with it vacated.
Vacated and Remanded.