165 Ind. 381 | Ind. | 1905
Action by appellee against appellant for negligence resulting in an injury to her person. The complaint was answered by a general denial. There was a trial by jury, which resulted in a verdict for appellee for $1,500, upon which judgment was rendered. The overruling of a motion for a new trial is assigned as error.
Appellee received her injury by a fall upon a sidewalk as she was proceeding along Iloyt avenue, in the city of Muncie, at a point where said sidewalk intersects a certain switch or “Y” extending from the main line of appellant to the line of another railroad. Appellant’s counsel first present the question whether the evidence shows that it was the duty of the company to maintain said crossing, and in this connection the claim is advanced that the evidence does not show that the company owned the switch. Appellee introduced in evidence upon the trial certain interrogatories propounded to appellant, and its answers thereto. Interroga
Appellant’s final contention is that the assessment of damages is excessive. It appears from the evidence that by appellee’s fall she sustained an oblique fracture of the left knee. The injury did not at first appear serious, but it resulted in a profound disturbance of the nervous system. Hir suffering for several months was -extreme. During this time the pains in her stomach, head and back were so severe that she would frequently cry out, and she slept but little. She was very nervous, and any loud noise, as the playing of a band or the rumble of a wagon, would cause her intense suffering, and would often cause her to vomit. On some occasions she vomited blood. She lost fifty-five pounds in weight, and a test showed she was seriously affected with anaemia. During her illness the pain in her stomach and bowels caused her to keep her lower limbs bent back, and it afterwards transpired that neither she nor the physicians were able to straighten them. The doctor who treated her testified that it was problematical whether she would ever be able to walk. Two disinterested physicians were appointed by the court to examine appellee, and she submitted to a thorough physical examination at their hands. These physicians, as witnesses, detailed at great length the conditions found by them, and their conclusions concerning the case. One of them, asked as to the prospect of recovery, testified: “Well, that depends upon conditions. If you will allow me to supply the conditions, and say that her environment and surroundings are to be just as favorable as they should be, it may take her, while even under such surroundings and conditions, a number of months—perhaps six or eight, or ten or twelve—and yet that is problematical, and can not be stated definitely.” The testimony of the remaining physician was substantially the same. All of the medical witnesses ascribed her condition to the injury to her knee.
In Stockton v. Stockton, supra, it was said: “It is next insisted that the court should have granted a new trial because of the insufficiency of the evidence. The evidence is not in the record, but counsel for the appellant say that the special findings contain all the material facts which were in issue, and they then proceed to argue that the special findings of the jury are inconsistent with the general verdict, and that for this reason the court should have granted the new trial. We can not concede the correctness of this position. When the question is made before this court as to the correctness of the ruling of the inferior court in refusing a new trial on account of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, the evidence, and all the evidence, must be in the record, or we can not decide the question. The findings of the jury in answer to interrogatories propounded to them, can not be used as, or in lieu of, the evidence, to show the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the general verdict. If it be supposed that the special findings of the jury are inconsistent with the general verdict, the proper mode of presenting that question is to move, in the court below, for judgment on the special findings. Then, if the special findings are clearly inconsistent with the general verdict, it is the duty of that court to be governed by the special findings, and render the judgment in accordance with them, disregarding the general verdict. If the court refuse such motion, the party making it can except, and on appeal assign this ruling for error. But the ques
In Bedford, etc., R. Co. v. Rainbolt (1885), 99 Ind. 551, 555, it was contended that a venire de novo should have been awarded because the answers to interrogatories showed that there had been either a failure to find on all the issues, or that there was an ambiguity in the finding or verdict of the jury; but this court said: “Until overthrown by a special finding, absolutely inconsistent with it, the general verdict stands, and the judgment which follows is supported by it, and does not in any manner depend for support on the special interrogatories.”
The questions which the appeal presents are disposed of, and, as we have found no error, the judgment is affirmed.