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At the end of a trial, the jury renders its verdict, guilty or innocent, liable or not liable. Sometimes a jury gets it wrong though and renders a verdict that is obviously mistaken or legally impossible, or so one party thinks. Rules of court procedure allow the guilty or liable party to make a motion for judgment notwithstanding the fact that the jury verdict went against him or her. The party making the motion has to show that the jury could not legally or logically have come to the decision it made and so it must be wrong. You can think of it as if it is a sort of a mini-appeal of the verdict as soon as it is handed down. Of course it isn't a true appeal, which goes to an appellate court and will include more issues; but the party is challenging the correctness of the verdict.

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14y ago

A judgment NOV is normally awarded after trial if the judge deems that the jury's decision was incorrect as a matter of law. A judge's job is to be sure that the decision is legally correct. A motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict is rarely granted, but is normally made as a matter of course during litigation as its denial can provide grounds for appeal.

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Q: A motion requesting a judgment notwithstanding the verdict is?
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