311 Mass. 490 | Mass. | 1942
This is an action for the conscious suffering and death of the plaintiff’s intestate as the result of being struck by an automobile operated by the defendant on West Main Street in Avon on December 9, 1938. There were verdicts for the plaintiff both for conscious suffering and for death. Apparently because of dissatisfaction with the amounts of the verdicts, the plaintiff filed a bill of exceptions.
The plaintiff’s first alleged grievance is disclosed in the record from discussions between the judge and counsel which took place on two different days of the trial. Assuming that the plaintiff’s contentions were fully preserved by adequate exceptions, they amount only to this: (1) that the judge declined to allow the plaintiff’s counsel, in cross-examining the defendant, to ask him the question whether on December 22, 1938, he had “admitted the finding of guilty of the crime of operating an automobile negligently so that the lives and safety of the public might be endangered, on the ninth day of December, 1938, at Avon,” and (2) that the judge declined the plaintiff’s offer to prove that the defendant “did admit the finding of guilty of the crime aforesaid” and thereafter was found guilty by the District Court of Southern Norfolk and paid a fine of $30. The foregoing is the full extent of the question, the offer, and the exclusion. The plaintiff contends that the excluded evidence might have affected the degree of culpability of the defendant and might have led to a larger verdict on the count for death.
The plaintiff further excepts to the denial of his motion for a new trial. The grounds of the motion do not appear in the record. If inadequacy of the damages was a ground, while the verdicts may seem small, it was well within the discretion of the judge to refuse a new trial. Davis v. Boston Elevated Railway, 235 Mass. 482, 496, 497. Murnane v. MacDonald, 294 Mass. 372, 374, 375. Shockett v. Akeson, 310 Mass. 289, 292.
Exceptions overruled.