Seevers, J.
i practice w'uunot conMdered. I. The court submitted to the jury, under proper instructions, the question whether defendant entered ^ie Premises as a trespasser, and should be ejected ancl removed therefrom. This special interrogatory was answered in the negative. Counsel for the appellee insists that the interrogatory and answer cannot be considered, because it was not submitted to counsel for the appellee, as provided by statute. The abstract fails to show whether the claimed fact is true or not, and we cannot presume that it was. Besides this, we are unable to discover that this question was presented in the court below at any time, and it is certain that it should not be raised for the first time here.
2. APPEAL to supreme court: time of taking: motiou lor new triai.
*4423 assignrorfexaot^" uess‘ *441II. The appeal was taken on the twenty fifth day of September, 1885. There is some controversy when the judgment was rendered, but counsel for the appellee ... , . ,, , n , contend that it was rendered on the twenty-first day 0f the preceding March, and therefore it is J R ° ’ claimed that the appeal was not taken in time. Upon the rendition of the verdict a motion for a new trial was filed, which was overruled on the twenty-eighth day of March. An appeal lies from a refusal to grant a new trial, Code, § 3163. The appeal from the order refusing a new *442trial was therefore taken in time, and, as substantially the only error assigned is that the verdict is hot sustained by the evidence, we think the error assigned may be considered, if the assignment is sufficiently specific; which appellee contends it is not. The error assigned is that the “court erred overruling the first second and third grounds of defendant’s motion for a new trial.” The grounds referred to, while stated in three different ways, amount to the same thing, and embrace but a single proposition, and that is, briefly stated, that the verdict is not supported by the evidence. We think the assignment is as specific as it could be made without unnecessary prolixity.
4. practice excessive1' damages: renutuiur. III. The jury found that the plaintiff’s damages were $250. Under the instructions and special finding, all damages for an unlawful entry on the right of way were eliminated. The defendant entered on the . . . . , , ,. . premises early m August, and this action was commenced on the fourth day of October following. Because the appellee has filed an abstract making corrections in the appellant’s abstract, which corrections are denied by the appellant in a subsequent abstract, we have carefully examined the transcript, and particularly the evidence of Mrs. Fetterly, a daughter of the plaintiff on whose evidence the plaintiff relies to sustain the verdict. Appellant concedes that the plaintiff is entitled, under the evidence, to recover something, but insists that the verdict is excessive, and in this we feel forced to concur. It is not our practice to support our conclusions by a statement and discussion of the evidence, but we may say that it is claimed that the witness stated that the pasture was worth $100, and therefore it is insisted that the jury could well find that the plaintiff had been damaged in that sum. No such conclusion can be drawn from the evidence of Mrs. Fetterly, which is exceedingly loose, uncertain and unreliable. But, if force and effect is given thereto, which the jury had the right to do, it does not tend to show that the damages exceeded $100. This *443is an exceedingly liberal estimate, and we tbinlc the jury must have become confused as to the damages which, under the instructions, on the theory that the defendant was not a trespasser, the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
The plaintiff may, if she desires, remit in the circuit court $150 of the judgment, or a new trial must be granted. The defendant must have judgment for its costs in this court.
Reversed.