58 A.2d 442 | Pa. | 1948
These are appeals by the defendant from judgments entered on a verdict for a minor plaintiff, acting by a legal representative, and for his parents, for damages for injuries suffered by the minor (an eight-year old boy) through the alleged negligence of the defendant. It is presently unnecessary to relate the circumstances attending the accident. The appellant concedes that the case was for the jury both on the question of her negligence and any contributory negligence on the part of the minor who, obviously, was of tender years.
The appellant's sole complaint is with the lower court's refusal of her motion for a new trial in support whereof she now assigns the following reasons: (1) the trial court erred in refusing to withdraw a juror because of allegedly improper remarks by plaintiffs' counsel in his address to the jury, (2) the trial court's charge as a whole was prejudicial to the defendant and erroneous, specifically, on elements of damage, and (3) the verdict is excessive. There is no merit in any of these contentions.
Of the two allegedly improper remarks by plaintiffs' counsel in his address to the jury, one is a matter of undetermined disputed fact on the face of the record and, *185
consequently, not capable of constituting a predicate for the motion. At the conclusion of the address, counsel for defendant, reading from notes that he had been "able to get down", gave his version of the remarks in question and moved for the withdrawal of a juror. Counsel for plaintiffs at once denied having used the word concerning the minor's injury, which the defendant's motion imputed to him, and gave an unoffending word as what he had used in the context. And, there, the matter was permitted to rest. The learned trial judge overruled the motion, adding, in an obvious effort to eradicate any possible harm to the defendant, — "I will instruct the jury as to the nature of the injuries". The other remark of plaintiffs' counsel, concerning the defendant's impecunious appearance, was not fairly capable of injecting prejudice into the jury's deliberations, as appellant's counsel seems to fear, nor is it reasonable to infer that it did so. On the record as it stands, it could not justifiably be said that the learned trial judge erred in overruling the motion, particularly, when it is borne in mind that a motion for the withdrawal of a juror calls for an exercise of discretion by the trial judge in any instance: Wilhelm v. Uttenweiler,
Moreover, the trial court's denial of the defendant's motion to withdraw a juror is not properly reviewable in the state of the record before us. From the time of the court's action in the regard indicated, the defendant never again complained of the ruling as error until she reached this Court on appeal. The action had been neither assigned nor argued in the court en banc on the motion for a new trial. And, a matter not raised or duly pursued in the court below will not, ordinarily, be considered on appeal: Grange Nat. Bank v. Collman,
The court's charge was not prejudicial to the defendant. On the contrary, when read and analyzed as a whole, as it rightly must be (see Nicola v. American Stores Company,
The verdict is not excessive. In the light of the testimony, the amounts do not "shock our sense of justice" which they would have to do before we would be warranted *187
in interfering by way of reductions upon review: Fasick v.Byerly,
The judgments are affirmed.