147 A.2d 497 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1958
The plaintiff, a pedestrian, recovered a verdict of $5500. Since he received a verdict, the court need not consider present arguments concerning negligence and contributory negligence advanced in this hearing by the plaintiff. He prevailed upon the issue of liability. Complaint that the jury improperly considered the issue of contributory negligence "loses its significance," since this must have been resolved in favor of the plaintiff. Cone v.Cullen,
A request to charge as to the "depreciated" dollar had no place in the case since, among other things, the evidence disclosed loss of earnings and hospital and doctor bills incurred within the past two to three years. Quednau v. Langrish,
The plaintiff, sixty-six years old, sustained a fracture of the sternum, a type of injury in a man of his age which "probably never heals," according to his doctor. Dr. Goff testified that the plaintiff had a 10 per cent minimal permanent partial disability. Dr. Sewall, for the defense, felt, however, that this injury did not "particularly" disable the plaintiff, although he agreed it would not return to normal. The accident happened November 29, 1955, and the plaintiff finally returned to work as a carpenter with the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad on *152
March 21, 1956. He received a laceration on his head, cuts and bruises to his right leg and to his left foot, and a sprain of his neck. He incurred bills as follows: Dr. Goff, $180; Hartford Hospital, $208.70; Dr. Greene, $45. His loss of wages was $1385. While the verdict appears low, the court cannot substitute its judgment for that of the jury. Pierce v. Albanese,
Upon defendant's motion, the court refused to allow the amount of the ad damnum to go to the jury. The plaintiff complains that this procedure lowered the amount of the verdict which would otherwise have been given. The ad damnum clause has no probative value; the amount claimed by the plaintiff or counsel is of no concern to the trier. The amount returned must be based upon the jury's application of the rule of fair, just and reasonable compensation which will fully compensate the plaintiff for what he has suffered; Flood v. Smith,
"Informing the jury of the ad damnum clause serves no useful or sound function. If it be said that the amount claimed constitutes the maximum limit of permissible recovery, the legal effect of that limitation is better left in the control of an experienced trial court. In the hands of the jury, untrained in the trial of cases, it may very well raise confusing and difficult complications. It is a matter of common knowledge that ordinarily the amount of damages laid in the complaint is much in excess of any sum which the plaintiff hopes to receive." Botta v. Brunner,
Parenthetically, it may be noted that there have been times in the trial of other cases when reports have circulated after a verdict has been returned that jurors have attempted to render a verdict approximating the ad damnum claim. In such a case the court is powerless to rule upon an action which raises "confusing and difficult complications," and an appeal would not lie to correct what may have been an application of an improper rule of law.Rosenblatt v. Berman,
Even presuming error, for the purpose of argument, it cannot avail the plaintiff since it cannot legally affect the amount of the verdict. Where the instructions fully state the rule of damages, knowing the ad damnum clause cannot change it, and application of such knowledge in arriving at the amount of the verdict would be improper. Haight v. Hoyt, supra.
The motion is denied.