76 N.J.L. 539 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs below, husband and wife, sued for damages arising from personal injuries sustained by the wife by reason of a collision between a carriage in which plaintiffs were riding, and a trolley car operated by defendant. The husband added a count for damages in his own right on account of loss of his wife’s companionship and services, and at the circuit a verdict of $1,500 damages was found in favor of the husband and $1,000 for the wife. A number of assignments of error are relied on, the most important of which are based on the refusal of the trial judge to nonsuit and to direct a verdict for defendant on the grounds—first, that no actionable negligence of defendant was made out, and secondly, that plaintiffs were legally chargeable with contributory negligence.
A number of witnesses testified to seeing the accident or hearing the crash, and that it was not preceded by any ringing of the gong; also to the high speed of the car. Other witnesses for the plaintiffs, especially a passenger on the car, testified that there was no slacking of speed until the collision occurred.
On this state of the evidence as to the occurrence of the accident, a motion was made to nonsuit on the two grounds already mentioned, was denied, and this denial is assigned for error.
It is claimed, first, that there is nothing in the above facts to indicate any negligence of the defendant’s servants. We think there was a clear case for the jury on this point. The circumstances which the jury were entitled to find as facts that a trolley car, driven at high speed on a dark night, ran into the rear of a wagon in front of it and traveling in the same direction, without any warning, and when the car had a headlight bright enough to show by its very reflection on the ground the approach of the car to those in the wagon, and therefore manifestly bright enough to make the wagon plainly
Request was made for the direction of a verdict at the close of the testimony on the same grounds. The defendant’s evidence was brief. Conductor and motorman both testified that the night was foggy, and that the car was running slowly and the bell was ringing constantly. The motorman also testified that the glass in the front of his vestibule was blurred by the rain, so that he could not see well.
The speed of the car and ringing of the bell were, of course, matters of fact for the jury to settle, and which they doubtless settled in favor of the plaintiffs. On this assumption the matter of contributory negligence stood as on the motion to nonsuit. With regard to negligence of the motorman, the other new evidence certainly could not help the defendant, for if his vision was obscured by fog, or cut off by a blurred window, his duty was to use the greater care in the operation of his car, commensurate with the increased danger. The request to direct was therefore also properly refused.
We find no error in the admission of evidence as to Mrs. Ball’s general disposition since the accident, and as to certain physical disabilities said to be due to her general nervous condition. All this bore directly on the damages -claimed by the husband for the loss of consortium, the companionship, sympathy, aid and services of his wife.
The court properly refused to charge that Mrs. Ball’s injuries were not permanent. On this point the testimony was contradictory and raised a question of fact which called for the decision of the jury.
The other assignments of error were not argued, but we have examined them and find no injurious error.
The judgment will be affirmed.
For affirmance:—The Chancellor, Chibe Justice, Garrison, Swayze, Trenchard, Parker, Bergen, Bogert, Vredenburgh, Vroom, Gray, Dill, J.J. 12.
For reversal—None.