144 Conn. 741 | Conn. | 1957
The plaintiff was injured when the named defendant’s bus, in which she was riding as a. passenger for hire, collided with an automobile operated by the defendant Alice M. Buzelle. The plaintiff' sued four defendants but before trial dropped one of them. As to the others, the jury returned a verdict of $1000 against the bus company and its driver, and in favor of Mrs. Buzelle. The plaintiff has appealed, assigning error in the court’s refusal to set aside the verdict as to all three defendants, in the charge as given, in the court’s refusal to charge as requested,, and in four rulings on evidence.
The plaintiff’s main contention is that the verdict •against the other two defendants should have been set aside because of its inadequacy. It is a court’s duty to set aside a verdict if its manifest injustice is so plain and palpable as to justify the suspicion that the jury or some of its members were influenced by prejudice, corruption or partiality. Roma v. Thames River Specialties Co., 90 Conn. 18, 19, 96 A. 169. No such infirmities are apparent, however, in .this record. The plaintiff alleged in her complaint, and at trial attempted to prove, that she had been seriously injured as the result of the collision. The 'extent of her injuries and the amount of her special -damages were hotly contested issues between the parties. The jury were entitled to accept the evi-dence, professional and otherwise, submitted by the defendant. “A conclusion reached upon comparison -and examination of conflicting professional opinion, hy reliance upon one rather than another, can rarely be found erroneous in law in the absence of bad faith.” Kulak v. Landers, Frary & Clark, 120 Conn. 606, 608, 181 A. 720.
The plaintiff’s requests to charge were devoted -to the degree of care required of the bus company
The evidential rulings on the question propounded to Dr. Gilbert H. Glaser and on the admissibility of an electroencephalogram were correct. The assignment of error as to the ruling excluding testimony by Dr. Michael E. Brodsky is not properly presented in the record and for that reason cannot be passed upon. The ruling upon the question addressed to Dr. Daniel P. Griffin on cross-examination was within the discretion of the court. Eamiello v. Piscitelli, 133 Conn. 360, 370, 51 A.2d 912.
There is no error.