cause was before this court at a former term, and is reported in 67 Texas, 220, where will be found a statement of the case.
On the trial from which that appeal was taken a plea in abatement-based on the nonjoinder of Eliza Cohen, who was claimed to be a copartner with Isaac and Herman Cohen, was filed, tried, and decided against, appellants.
It was then urged that the plea in abatement should have been tried-before the cause was tried, but it was held that this was a matter within the discretion of the court; and further, that her relation to Isaac and Herman Cohen was such as to make the judgment to he rendered in the-cause binding on her.
On the last trial the court again submitted the plea in abatement with-the main issue, and declined to require a separate finding on that. This is assigned as error.
If, on the first trial, the plea in abatement had been tried before the cause was tried on its merits and decided against appellants, it would not have been their right to have that tried again, unless on appeal some error had been found in that proceeding. That on the former trial the plea in abatement was submitted with the merits does not affect the question.
When once tried and decided adversely to a defendant, he is not entitled to have a plea in abatement tried again, though on appeal the judgment may be reversed on some ground not affecting the decision on the plea in abatement.
The purpose of the plea in abatement was to have a decision whether the proper plaintiffs were before the court. It in no way affected the merits of the controversy, and a practice which would lead to a resuhmission of a plea in abatement every time a new trial on the merits was granted, or every time a cause was tried after an appeal and reversal on the merits, would lead to interminable confusion.
We are of opinion that the court would not have erred had it declined on the last trial to submit any issue on the plea in abatement, and the *414manner of its submission, it having been decided against appellants, is an immaterial question.
There was a verdict for $150 against principal and sureties on the attachment bond as actual damages, and also a verdict against the surety who acted as agent in suing out the writ for $10,000 as exemplary damages. It is urged that both are excessive.
The jury evidently found that the writ was wrongfully sued out, but that the principals and one of the sureties were not actuated by malice or evil motive in doing this.
The question then arises whether the evidence justified a finding that .appellees had suffered actual damages to the extent of $150, for none other could be imposed for the mere wrongful use of the writ.
The goods seized were a part of a stock of goods in the second floor of appellees’ business house, valued by the sheriff at $900, but by appellees .at $1800.
The business of appellees is not shown to have been in any manner interfered with by the sheriff while engaged in making this levy upon but a small part of the stock of goods. The sheriff remained in possession -of the goods about three hours during the time he was engaged in making an inventory and packing the goods in trunks, at the expiration of which they were replevied. The goods are not shown to have been injured in any respect, nor is there any evidence that a single sale was lost or interfered with by the sheriff’s possession; the goods were not moved from the store. The actual damages resulting from these facts must have been very small.
One of appellees testified, over objection, that the levy “interfered with our business, of course. We were all broke up. The levy affected us in this way: people who had dealt with us went somewhere else to trade, after the levy, to the extent of $50 or $60 per day from immediately after the levy until now.” A levy upon an insignificant part of a merchant’s goods could not be said to be the proximate cause of such a loss of trade, and if the jury considered this, or the general expressions of the witness quoted, in making an estimate of the actual damages, they erred.
He further stated: “We had ordered $900 worth of shoes of Olaflin & Thayer, Boston; one Harrison had agreed to take one-half of this bill; the order was not filled. * * * Harrison was to take half of the Olaflin & Thayer bill; he was to pay cash, with ten per cent added to cost in the store. This sale had been made a week or more prior to the levy.” O ther evidence shows that Olaflin & Thayer declined to ship these goods because they saw in a Boston paper an announcement of the failure of appellees, with the publication of which appellants are not shown to have had any connection, except in so far as the levy of attachment may have given ground for such a report.
*415If it be conceded that the loss of this sale could be considered as actual damages, it would only amount to about $45 with interest; but it would be difficult to hold that the levy was the proximate cause of 'this loss. Too many independent agencies intervened the levy and loss. The causal connection was broken.
Some person doubtless sent the report to Boston. Some person gave it to the publisher and he published it, and in doing this some or all of them made a false statement if there be any truth in the evidence found in the record. It can not be presumed, in the absence of proof, that these things were done by appellees, or any of them. The evidence tends to show that Claflin & Thayer would have shipped the goods but for the .announcement seen by them.
He further stated: “ We had given an order for goods to B. S. Jaffray & Co., Hew York; the goods were shipped and arrived the day before the levy of attachment. Some of the goods had been disposed of to Lidnor .and Harry Hancock, and Jaffray & Co. heard of the attachment, and through their agent here, * * * the goods being already unpacked, were repacked and turned over to the agent of the house on his demand. We had to pay the money back to get those goods that had been sold.”
The value of the goods thus returned is not shown, and those sold to Lidnor and Hancock each amounted to about $15. The goods had not been paid for, and it is not shown what damage resulted from the cancellation of the sale, nor that they might not have been paid for and retained. As to these goods the question of proximate cause again arises.
He further stated that “another bill shipped to us by Anderson & Co., ’Troy, Hew York, came the same day, and as we had sold some of these goods we got the money and paid their bill to their agent here.”
The amount of this bill is not shown, but under the evidence we are unable, as was the jury, to say what damage resulted from the fact that those goods were paid for. If their price was due it ought to have been paid, and if not due, further proof was necessary to show any damages, even if the use of the attachment could be said to be the proximate cause of any resulting injury.
There was much evidence tending to show loss of credit, but it is well settled that such evidence can not furnish a basis for actual damages.
We have considered all the evidence claimed to have bearing on the amount of actual damages, and while we are loth to set aside the verdict of a jury on a question of this kind, we feel constrained to hold that there was no evidence on which the jury was authorized to find that appellees sustained actual damages to the amount of $150.
The testimony of the sheriff, uncontradicted, was that “ the goods were not taken from the store at all. Ho one was interfered with or interrupted in any way, as we were upstairs, and the trading was going on downstairs as usual. The clothing levied on was appraised at $900, and *416was in six or seven trunks, where they were left. In the evening the goods were released upon replevy bond being given.”
The evidence of appellee who testified in the case was to the same effect.
There was much evidence tending to show that the attachment was-wrongfully sued out, and much tending to show that malice may have influenced the agent who sued it out, and much in rebuttal of this, which, renders it likely that in estimating actual damages the jury considered evidence which could properly be considered only on question of right-to and amount of exemplary damages. On another trial the jury should be informed of the only purpose for which much of the evidence found in the record can be considered.
In view of the disposition that will be made of the case, it does not become necessary now to pass on the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict for exemplary damages.
It is insisted, however, that there is a rule of law which requires that-in such cases there be some fixed proportion between the actual and exemplary damages awarded.
It has been said in some cases that exemplary damages should not bedisproportioned to actual damages; but it was not meant by this that the-one should be in any exact or approximate ratio to the other. All that was meant was that the imposition of heavy exemplary damages where-the actual damages recoverable were small was a fact which ought to be-looked to to determine whether passion rather than reason dictated the verdict. Whenever this appears, or is rendered highly probable by contrasting the actual injury with the extent of punishment awarded, looking to all the circumstances of aggravation, new trials should be granted.
A power such as may be exercised by juries in awarding exemplary-damages is liable to great abuse, may often lead to great oppression, and there is no class of cases in which the conservation of the judge should more frequently find field for action.
In cases based on facts which merit condemnation or even punishment,, though not by law constituting crime, juries, under commendable impulses, but with judgment warped by passion, no doubt often render excessive verdicts, and if it be conceded that such verdicts are to stand because the matter was within the discretion of the jury, then we have an-absolutism, a despotism, nowhere else found in our form of government.
The matter is in the discretion of the jury in the first instance, but it-is the duty of the judge to see that this discretion is not abused.
The power to grant new trials where verdicts are evidently excessive, as on other legal grounds, is one given, firmly and fearlessly to be exercised, and it can not be surrendered.
Verdicts of juries are entitled to the highest consideration, but it must he remembered that they are not always right, and if uncontrolled will: in some cases lead to oppression.
*417The verdict for exemplary damages was large—many times larger than the Legislature has authorized to be imposed by way of fine for acts malicious and highly aggravating in character; and it will be well for the judge, should such another verdict be brought in, to carefully determine whether justice between the parties or the welfare of society demands the imposition of such a punishment.
Looking to the issues in the case, we are of opinion that the court did not err in admitting the evidence of Giddings, senior and junior, E. L. Salley, W. H. Munson, and H. Cohen, which was objected to.
The sixth and eighth charges requested by appellants and refused were embraced in charges given so far as they were correct, and for this reason the court did not err in refusing them.
It is urged that the action could not be maintained because commenced before attachment suit was terminated. It has frequently been held that an action for malicious prosecution in a criminal or civil action jvill not lie until the prosecution has terminated favorably to the party prosecuted.
The rule appealed to has no application, however, to this class of cases, although in a sense actions for malicious prosecution, for no issue whether the attachment was wrongfully or maliciously used could have been tried in the attachment suit. Fortman v. Rothier, 8 Ohio St., 550.
The constant practice in this State has been to permit a defendant in attachment to reconvene for damages resulting from a wrongful or malicious use of the writ, and the trial of this proceeds with the main action.
The plea in reconvention is essentially a separate action. Such a practice is at war with the theory that an attachment suit must have terminated before an action for malicious prosecution can be based on it.
The rule only applies when the issue to be tried in the last action was necessarily included in the first.
There was no misjoinder of parties or causes of action, for appellees sought to recover against all of appellants damages actual and exemplary on account of an act in which they all participated.
On the former trial there was a judgment against all the defendants except the defendant Wenar, but there was a judgment in his favor. The former appeal was prosecuted only by defendants against whom judgment was rendered, and it seems that the appeal bond was not made payable to Wenar as well as to plaintiffs, but no question as to its sufficiency was raised, and the judgment was reversed.
On last trial, judgment for actual damages was entered against Wenar as well as the other defendants, and motion in arrest of judgment was made by him on the ground that he was discharged by former judgment, and that reversal of that did not vacate it as to him.
FT otice of appeal from the former judgment was given, and of that W enar was bound to take notice.
*418An appeal bond was filed by ¿he other defendants, which may have been defective because not made payable to him as well as the plaintiffs, but if he desired to take advantage of this he should have done so in proper time and manner. Notice of appeal given and bond filed clothed this court with jurisdiction over the entire judgment, and its reversal annulled it in toto. It stood after reversal as though it had never been rendered.
‘ The main purpose of a bond is to give security to the adverse party, and if the bond filed be not such in all respects as the law requires for this purpose, this court will not consider the case over the objection of the party entitled to such protection if objection be made in proper time and manner.
There are expressions to be found in opinions from which it might be inferred that the giving of a bond strictly in accordance with the statute was essential to the jurisdiction of this court, but it must be understood that the Constitution confers on this court what jurisdiction it has as to subject matter, and that parties may waive irregularities as to matters intended solely for their benefit.
The case stands as to Wenar as though a new trial had been granted after the former judgment was rendered.
Bor the error before noticed, the judgment will be reversed and the cause xemanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Delivered March 4, 1890.