Plaintiff argues in her first assignment of error that when the jury foreman requested an explanation of the law on damages, the trial court inadequately responded to the question. The jury foreman asked in essence whether the jury was bound by amounts given of certain expenses. The trial judge responded:
The jury —the jury puts the amount that —if you feel that the plaintiff is entitled to any amount of damages, it’s the jury’s province to determine that amount. The Court has not instructed you that you are required to return any particular figure. That is your job to determine the amount from the evidence, and the plaintiff has the burden to prove to you as to the amount of damages sustained by the greater weight *656 of the evidence. That is your job to determine the amount of damages.
Judge Farmer’s additional instruction was correct in law and was a sufficient response to the jury’s question. In the initial charge the jury was properly instructed on all pertinent issues raised by the evidence offered. Plaintiff did not request any specific instructions in the trial court and is barred from asserting them on appeal. A peremptory instruction as to damages would not have been proper in this case because the evidence was in conflict.
Distributing Corp. v. Parts, Inc.,
Plaintiff’s second assignment of error challenges the trial court’s denial of her motion pursuant to Rule 59(a) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure to vacate and set aside the verdict of the jury as to damages and for a new trial. Plaintiff contends the verdict on the amount of damages was “inconsistent with uncontradicted evidence, not rendered in accordance with law, arbitrary, indicative of a manifest disregard by the jury of the instructions of the court, inadequate in view of the uncontradicted evidence and invalid as a matter of law.” The granting or denial of a motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial is within the sound discretion of the trial judge.
Dixon v. Young,
A review of the evidence and the effect of the stipulation on the jury in its role as the trier of fact shows no manifest abuse of
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discretion by the trial judge in his denial of plaintiffs motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial. In the first issue submitted to the jury, it found that plaintiff was injured and that her injury resulted from the negligence of defendant. In the second issue submitted to the jury, it found that plaintiff was not con-tributorily negligent. The parties stipulated plaintiff incurred medical bills in the sum total of $8,716.79. However, this stipulation did not state that such medical bills were incurred by plaintiff in the treatment of injuries resulting from defendant’s negligence. There was evidence of illnesses of a nature other than the type that defendant’s negligence could have caused. First, plaintiff was hospitalized and treated for pneumonia. Although Dr. Battigelli testified that plaintiff’s internal injuries received in the auto accident “could or might have been related in some logic [sic] fashion to the accident,” the jury as trier of fact could or could not believe the testimony of this witness on this point. It is the province of the jury to weigh the evidence and determine questions of fact.
Howard v. Mercer,
The jury was instructed to find by the greater weight of the evidence whether the medical expenses incurred by the plaintiff were the proximate result of the defendant’s negligence. As discussed above, questions were raised by the evidence as to whether all of the stipulated medical expenses were incurred by plaintiff as a result of defendant’s negligence.
Plaintiff also contends the jury failed to award other damages for personal injury. This we do not know and as to this question cannot speculate since the jury did not allocate the damages to particular causes. Plaintiff argues that her evidence
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was uncontradicted. However, the above discussion tends to show the evidence was not so unequivocal and clear. Even though evidence is uncontradicted, the credibility of the evidence is exclusively for the jury.
Morris v. Tate,
We hold the trial court judge did not abuse his discretion in the denial of plaintiffs motions to set aside the verdict and for a new trial because the damages were inadequate.
No error.
