134 Me. 10 | Me. | 1935
The plaintiffs in these two cases, which were tried together, were passengers in an automobile driven by the defendant, Vincent P. Fisher. They were injured, when the car, in making a right angle turn from one street to another, went off the road, and plunged to the bed of a stream forty feet below. In each case a verdict was found for the plaintiff, and each is now before us on the defendant’s general motion for a new trial and on an exception to the refusal to give a requested instruction.
There is ample justification for the finding of the jury that the defendant was negligent. The controversy is as to the contributory negligence of the plaintiffs, which, according to the defendant’s contention, is indicated by their accepting án invitation to ride with him, when he was in an intoxicated condition. That the defendant had had liquor to drink seems to be established, but that his being under the influence of it wás a contributing cause of the accident is not altogether clear, and much less so that the plaintiffs knew his condition. He states that he could drive “all right,” and
Neither can we hold that the damages are excessive. The plaintiff, Bubar, suffered severe lacerations to his head, and for a time was in a serious condition from shock caused by loss of blood and immersion in the water. He had some injury to his back, diagonsed as a sacro-iliac strain which has incapacitated him to some extent. He was awarded $910. The amount does not seem unreasonable, nor does the sum of $322 given to the plaintiff, Foss, who had bills for physicians, hospitalization, and nursing, and was incapacitated for work for some little time.
The defendant in each case requested the following instruction:
“If you find that this plaintiff accompanied this defendant on the night of the accident and drank with the defendant or knew that the defendant was drinking to the extent that he was under the influence of liquor and then voluntarily reentered the car, or continued therein, and went on with the defendant, you must as a matter of law find that the plaintiff was negligent and that he cannot recover in this action.”
This instruction would have required the jury to have found for the defendant, if the plaintiff had drunk with the defendant on the night of the accident regardless of the amount of liquor taken or the effect of it on the defendant. Furthermore, it is necessary in order to establish contributory negligence in a case such as this, not only that the driver of the car should, to the knowledge of the passenger, have been under the influence of liquor, but that this condition should have been a contributing cause of the accident. Richards v. Neault, 126 Me., 17, 135 A., 524. The instruction was properly refused. Motions overruled.
Exceptions overruled.