On October 19, 1965, the plaintiff attended an awards dinner given by his employer at The Corner House Restaurant in Farmington, which is owned and operated by the defendant. After dinner the plaintiff, together with others, went to the cocktail lounge to have a drink. While there, and in an attempt to locate the men’s room, the plaintiff walked through an exit door, fell, and injured his leg. He alleged that the fall was caused by a dangerous condition negligently maintained by *578 the defendant. The casе was tried to a jury, which found the issues for the plaintiff as against the defendant and awarded him $70,000 damages. The defendant has appealed to this court from the judgment rendered on the verdict.
We shall first consider the assignments of error directed to the court’s rulings upon the admissibility of certain evidence. During the trial Alice Gr. Curran was called as a witness by the defendant. Mrs. Cur-ran was employed as a waitress at the restaurant at the time of the injury. Over the defendant’s objection Mrs. Currаn testified on cross-examination that she had observed cocktail glasses at the table where the plaintiff had been sitting. Also over the defendant’s objection a written statement signed by Mrs. Curran before trial in the presence of сounsel for the defendant was admitted. There is no need to decide the correctness of the court’s rulings as to the statement and testimony in question because they were harmless. See
Burke
v.
Fancher,
In the only other assignment of error directed to a ruling on evidence, the defendant claims that the court erred in excluding testimony to thе effect that, pursuant to the provisions of the plaintiff’s employment contract, his medical expenses and wages were paid in full despite the time he lost from work, and thus the extent of his damages tended to be lessened. This claim amounts to an attack on what has been termed the collateral source rule, which provides that benefits received by a plaintiff from a source wholly collateral to and independent of the tortfeasor will not diminish the damages otherwise recoverable. 22 Am. Jur. 2d, Damages, § 206. “Where the plaintiff during the period of his disability receives salary or other compensation from his employer, the rule followed or approved in most jurisdictions is that the person whose negligence caused the injury to [the] plaintiff is not entitled to mitigate or reduce damages in whole or in part by the amount of salary or wages received by [the] plaintiff from his employer during the period of disability, whether the payments were pure gratuities or paid pursuant to a contractual obligation . . . .” Note,
Error has been assigned in the court’s failure to charge, as the defendant requested, that any award given the plaintiff is tax free and not subject to any income tax whatever. The great weight of authority in the United States is committed to the rule that, in an action to recover damages for personal injuries, an instruction such as is now under consideration is improper and, when requested, should be refused. See, e.g.,
Kawamoto
v.
Yasutake,
The defendant relies heavily on
Dempsey
v.
Thompson,
*582
The other case cited in the request to charge for the proposition that аny award given to the plaintiff was tax free and not subject to any income tax whatever was
Floyd
v.
Fruit Industries, Inc.,
We conclude that the court did not err in refusing to charge as requested by the defendant.
The defendant attacks the court’s charge in two other respects. It first claims that the cоurt should not have informed the jury as to which party requested certain portions of the charge. Although we do not approve of such a procedure, in the' absence of anything incorrect at law the giving of requests in this manner is nоt in itself reversible error, unless the jury were misled; see
Bridgeport L. A. W. Corporation
v.
Levy,
Other parts of the charge complained of relate to the court’s discussion of the evidence. We have carefully examined the charge as a whole and have determined that in no particular did it unfairly submit the issues of fact.
Mercer Electric Mfg. Co.
v.
Connecticut Electric Mfg. Co.,
The defendant’s final claim is that the amount of the verdict was excessive. The court denied a motion to set aside the verdict as being excessivе and has set forth its reasons in a memorandum of decision. The ruling of a trial court on such a motion is entitled to great weight; see, e.g.,
Vogel
v.
Sylvester,
The defendant cites cases in its brief as authority for its claim that the award of $70,000 was excessive, but we have held that comparisons with amounts in other verdicts serve little purpose.
Lopez
v.
Price,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
