OPINION
This is а civil action instituted by Jessica Fox, a minor, and her father, Worth Fox, against the Allstate Insurance Co. The case arose out of an accident in August 1973 between Jessica and an automobile driven by Philomena Charette, an uninsured motorist. Although Mrs. Charette was uninsured, the plaintiffs’ insurance policy provided coverage for accidents between members of the plaintiffs’ family and uninsured motorists. The plaintiffs have sued their insurer, the defendant Allstate Insurance Co., seeking benefits under this policy. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs. The defendant appeals from the denial of motions for a directed verdict and new trial. The defendant also alleges error in the refusal of the trial justice to give certain jury instructions. The plaintiffs appeal from the trial justice’s denial of their motion for additur or new trial on damages. We affirm.
*905 The pertinent facts are these. Late in the afternoon of August 31, 1973, Jessica Fox, age seven, and two of her playmates decided to walk from their neighborhood to buy soda at a store on Mineral Spring Avenue, North Providence. Because of the hour, traffic was heavy on Mineral Spring Avenue. In attempting to cross the strеet, Jessica collided with an automobile driven by Philomena Charette.
At trial, Jessica testified that her two playmates crossed Mineral Spring Avenue ahead of her and were beckoning to her to join them when she collided with the car. The other children claimed that Jessica was crossing ahead of them when the accident occurred. Mrs. Charette testified that she had not seen any children cross, that in any event she was not looking for pedestrians, and that her first knowledge of Jessica’s presence was when, upon hearing a “thud” against her car, she looked in the mirror and saw the little girl lying on the street.
Jessica was immediately hospitalized and underwent emergency surgery to stop internal bleeding. Doctor Arnold Rosenbaum, who performed the surgery, testified that it was necessary to remove her gall bladder and portions of her liver and to insert a drainage tube in her chest cavity. Doctor Rosenbaum stated that the child’s life had been in jeopardy for a period immediately after the operation, that she spent several days in intensive care, and that she remained hospitalized for over a month. Upon her release from the hospital, Jessica’s activities were restricted in several ways. She was out of school for approximately six weeks and was prohibited from participating in physical education and riding a bicycle for some time because of her susceptibility to reinjury. As a result of the surgеry, Jessica has a scar running from the bottom of her breast bone to her navel. Finally, Dr. Rosenbaum testified that in September 1975, approximately two years after the accident, he examined Jessica and found her to be “doing very nicely and growing normally.”
I
MOTION FOR DIRECTED VERDICT
At the close of plaintiffs’ case, defendant moved for a directed verdict. This court stated the rules for considering such a motion in
Evans v. Liguori,
“When a motion for a directed verdict is made, the trial court and, * * * this court on review must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the party against whom the motion is made without weighing thе evidence or considering the credibility of the witnesses and extract from that record only those reasonable inferences that support the position of the party opposing the motion * * *. If there exist issues of fact upon which reasonable men may differ, the trial court has no alternative other than to let the jury decide them.” [Citations omitted]. Id. at 394,374 A.2d at 776 .
In the instant case a review of the evidence discloses the following facts when viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Jessica testified that she and two playmates were about to cross Mineral Spring Avenue when a car coming from their left stopped, apparently to let them pass. The three children then crossed to the center of the highway. Jessica’s two playmates left her side and crossed to the opposite side of the street, where they stood on the sidewalk bеckoning to her to come. At this point Jessica attempted to complete her crossing but came into collision with the Charette vehicle. From this testimony an inference might fairly be drawn that had Mrs. Charette been keeping a reasonably alert lookout, she would have seen the three children in their crossing attempt, as had the driver of the automobile coming from the opposite direction. She would further have noted Jessica standing in the middle of the street with her friends beckoning to her from the opposite side. The evidence pertaining to relative movеment of the automobiles and the children sustains the inference that all of these events would have been visible to the operator of an automobile who was maintaining the type of look *906 out required in the exercise of due care on a heavily traveled public street. There was also evidence in the case that Mrs. Charette was not looking for pedestrians in the area at that time. Putting these elements together, the trial justice drew the reasonable conclusion that a jury might upon this state of the evidence, find that Mrs. Charette had been negligent and thаt her negligence was a proximate cause of the collision. Therefore, the trial justice properly denied defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.
II
JURY INSTRUCTIONS
At the close of all the evidence, defendant submitted eleven specific requests for instructions to the jury. The defendant appeals specifically from the refusal of the trial justice to give two of these requests, numbered 2 and 8. 1
Request number 2 sought an instruction based upon G.L. 1956 (1968 Reenactment) § 31-18-3, which establishes the right-of-way in crosswalks as between pedestrians and motor vehicles. Rather than instructing on this sectiоn, however, the trial justice employed G.L. 1956 (1968 Reenactment) § 31-18-5, which applies to crossings other than at crosswalks. The only evidence in the record pertaining to crosswalks indicates that there was no crosswalk at the scene of the accident. Thus, had the trial justice comрlied with defendant’s request, he would have instructed on a point of law inapplicable to the facts in evidence. His denial of request number 2 was in keeping with our rule that a charge to the jury must relate to facts that have come into evidence.
Hamrick v. Yellow Cab Co.,
The defendant also appeals from the refusal of the trial justice to give requested charge number 8, which reads:
“A motorist’s duty to look is only necessary when looking will seasonably apprise a reasonably careful person of the conditions confronting him.”
For this proposition defendant relies upon
Dembicer v. Pawtucket Cabinet & Builders Finish Co.,
Ill
NEW TRIAL MOTIONS
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, awarding $10,000 for Jessica for pain and suffering and $9,269.87 to Worth Fox for his daughter’s medical expenses. Beсause the jury found Jessica’s contributory negligence to be a 50 percent cause of the accident, the jury reduced these awards to $5,000 and $4,634.94 respectively. The defendant moved for a new trial, and plaintiffs moved for additur or a new trial on the issue of damages. These motions wеre denied, and both parties appeal. The rules for considering a motion for a new trial following a jury verdict are well settled. In
Barbato v. Epstein,
In the instant case there is no doubt that the trial justice carefully undertook to review all evidence in passing upon this motion. In so doing, he concluded that had he been deciding the case as trier of fact, he would have found for defendant.
Having concluded that he would have rеached a different verdict, the trial justice’s task was not complete. As required in
Barbato,
he next considered whether to approve the verdict “even against his doubts as to its correctness.”
Because the trial justice clearly performed the steps outlined in
Barbato,
our rule permits us to reverse only if the appealing party shows that the trial justice “overlooked or misconceived material evidence or was otherwise clearly wrong *
Galusha v. Carlson,
R.I.,
The plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial on the ground of inadequacy of damages required the trial justice to perform the same function that he performed in considering the defendant’s general motion for a new trial.
Roberts v. Kettelle,
For the reasons stated, the defendant’s appeal and the plaintiffs’ cross-appeal are denied and dismissed, the judgment below is аffirmed, and the case is remitted to the Superior Court.
Notes
. The defendant objected to the court’s denial of requested instructions without stating the grounds for objection. This does not comply with the strict language of Super.R.Civ.P. 51(b). We held in
Armstrong v. Polaski,
. In
Dembicer v. Pawtucket Cabinet & Builders Finish Co.,
“The driver of an automobile intending to cross an intersection should not only observe the so-called laws of the road * * * but, before crossing, he should look when looking is efficient and take into consideration thе circumstances attending at the time, such as the physical conditions at the intersection, the weather, road and light conditions, the relative importance of the streets or highways forming the intersection, the intensity and course of traffic, and the distance and speed of other vehicles that may be approaching that same intersection. The rule in our cases that one must look before entering and crossing an intersecting street requires that one look at a time and place when looking will seasonably apprise a reasonably careful person of the conditions confronting him at the intersection, so that he may control his actions accordingly. The duty is not merely one of looking but is one of observing the traffic and general situation at or in the vicinity of the intersection. He must look in the careful and efficient manner in which a man of ordinary prudence in like circumstances would look in order to ascertain the existing conditions for his guidance." Id. at 456,193 A. at 624-25 .
Far from restricting the duty to look, this court held in
Dembicer
that looking once does not discharge the duty; the motorist must continue
*907
to look and observe in a “careful and efficient manner.”
Id.,
.
See Audiss v. Peter Kiewit Sons Co.,
