15 N.M. 9 | N.M. | 1909
OPINION OP TRIE COURT.
Appellee brought an action for damages for personal injuries received by reason of the alleged negligence of appellant and the jury rendered a verdict for Two Thousand Dollars damages. They also made special findings as to whether the street car .moved while appellee was in the act of boarding it and as to the number of the car in question. On motion for a new trial the court below compelled a remittitur down to Eleven Hundred Dollars damages and upon remittitur being filed overruled the motion and expressly refused to find the verdict for Two Thousand Dollars damages was the result of passion and prejudice on the part of the jury, holding, simply that the verdict was excessive for the injury suffered. Ap.pellant presents several propositions •which, will be examined.
5. Objections are made to giving and refusing of instructions which will be considered together. It is first objected that the instruction of the court is based upon evidence as to the condition of the car which it is alleged was incompetent. This objection cannot be sustained as we have already seen the evidence was competent and the instruction based upon it was, therefore, proper.
It is further objected that the court refused instructions requested-by appellant warning the jury to disregard any remarks of counsel not authorized by the evidence. The instructions asked were entirely proper ■■1’ form but the court had already directed the jury in this regard, and, as we think, with sufficient clearness.
The principal objection to the instructions arises out of the giving by the court of its own motion the following instruction:
“If you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff got upon a car of the defendant company which it was running in the course of its business as a common carrier of such persons as might choose to become passengers on it, and while upon said car was injured through the negligence of the defendant, its agents or servants, either in their putting the car in motion as the plaintiff was in the act of getting upon it, or in providing and using a car in its said business which was in the defective condition alleged by the plaintiff: in her complaint, provided that such defective condition was the cause of the injury to the plaintiff, and that she did not contribute to said injury through her own negligence, you should find the issues for the plaintiff.
This disposes of all of the assignments of error, and, for the reasons stated, the judgment of the court below will be affirmed and, it is so ordered.