103 N.Y.S. 977 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1907
Upon the trial of an action to recover damages for personal injuries, a verdict of $6,000 in plaintiff’s favor was rendered. Affirmances of the judgment entered upon that verdict have been held at the Appellate Division of this court and in the Court of Appeals. In the opinion filed upon the decision in the Court of Appeals it was said that “the affirmance should be without prejudice to the defendant to move for a new trial upon the ground that paralysis had not occurred.” There was a conflict of evidence upon the trial as to the extent and character of the boy’s injuries. A physician called on behalf of the plaintiff expressed the opinion that he had sustained a fracture of the spinous processes of the vertebra, and that, as a consequence, paralysis of the lower limbs would follow within the period of three years from the date of the injury, June 28, 1903. This was disputed by a physician called by defendant, who testified that, if there had been a fracture of the kind claimed, it had reunited and that no spinal difficulty what
Motion granted upon payment by defendant of trial costs and costs on appeal.