240 Pa. 169 | Pa. | 1913
Opinion by
This was a suit by husband and wife to recover for injuries alleged to have been suffered by the latter while a passenger in a car of the defendant company. The plaintiffs claimed that the motorman had so negligently operated the car that a collision with a wagon ensued
The appellant assigns for error several abstracts from the charge of the trial judge to which no special exceptions were taken at the trial. Since no general exception was taken to the charge, the assignments in question will not be considered. In Curtis v. Winston, 186 Pa. 492, we determined the.proper practice in this respect; but as there seems to be a prevailing misunderstanding upon the subject, it may not be amiss to repeat here an appropriate excerpt from Mr. Justice Dean’s opinion in that case. At page 497, in summarizing, he said, “What is our settled, construction of the statutes on this subject? 1. There must be an exception noted to the charge before verdict to enable the complaining party to successfully assign errors thereto afterwards. It is not necessary to specify the error at that time. But counsel must then indicate their dissent from the law as announced by the judge by having noted an exception to the charge. He then knows, if he ever knows, whether his contention is sustained or overruled. He is no longer bound to tender a bill of exceptions, specifying particularly the errors he complains of, and praying that the bills be sealed. Of this, the legislation since 1856 has relieved him; büt he has not been relieved either by statute or decision, if he has any objection to the law announced in' his hearing by the court, of then making it known of record. It is asking but little of him that, if he then have any reason to dissent, he have his exceptions noted of record. 2. He must request, before verdict, that the charge be reduced to writing from the stenographer’s notes and filed of record, and that he does so request must appear of record.” Also see McConnell v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 206 Pa. 370, and Lindsay v. Dutton, 227 Pa. 208, 212.
The appellant brought the charge upon the record by a request under the Act of Assembly, and had a bill
The first assignment is dismissed because it offends against Rule 28 of this court in not stating “a reference to the page of the paper-book or appendix where the matter (complained of in the assignment) may be found in its regular order in the printed evidence or notes , of the trial.”
The fourth assignment calls to our attention the following instruction: “She also would be entitled to compensation for her deprivation of the things in life that she was accustomed to do.” The phrase, “the things she was accustomed to do” is vague and indefinite, and should not have been used; but when taken in connection with its context, we do not see that it could have done any harm, and therefore, the assignment is overruled.
The second assignment complains of the following instruction : “If she was injured as she stated, and if she has suffered as she has stated, and if she is likely to suffer as she has stated, then she is entitled to a considerable verdict as compensation for it all.” The trial judge should not have said that the plaintiff was entitled “to a considerable verdict.” In this class of cases juries are too prone to give liberal, and ofttimes excessive verdicts; hence, any suggestion in that direction from the court is almost certain to do material harm to the defendant. There, is nothing in other parts of the charge to cure this erroneous instruction, and we cannot permit it to stand as a precedent. This assignment is sustained.
The sixth assignment covers an excerpt from the
The judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.