69 A. 8 | R.I. | 1908
This is a bill of exceptions based upon the refusal of the Superior Court to grant a new trial on the ground that the damages found by the jury were excessive and upon the rejection of a juror by the trial court.
The question of law in the case is the converse of that which was recently decided in Sansouver v. Glenlyon Works,
In Stevens v. Union Railroad Company,
In the case at bar the record shows that a juror was excused by the court on the ground that he was a stockholder in the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company. The court may have erred in not requiring proof of the fact, which is notorious in this community, that the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company controls the defendant corporation and is now operating its railroads; but we can not find that the rejection of the juror was in any way prejudicial to the defendant. So far as appears, the jury as empanelled was legally qualified and impartial. The juror who was substituted for the one excused was not challenged.
As was said in State v. Hensley,
It is argued by the defendant that the excessive damages *51 allowed by the jury furnished ground for inferring that the jury was not impartial.
We do not find the damages grossly excessive or, indeed, any larger than the jury might fairly have estimated from the evidence. The five years which elapsed between the accident and the trial had clearly shown that the injury had permanently disabled the plaintiff, and that his earning capacity would be seriously diminished during the remainder of his life. This actual injury, which could fairly be estimated in money, left a not unreasonable sum for his expenses and suffering.
The exceptions are overruled, and the cause is remitted to the Superior Court for judgment on the verdict.