Defendants appeal from a judgment by which jurors awarded plaintiff damages of $17,000 for personal injuries suffered in a collision between his automobile and a motor truck owned by defendant corporation and operated by defendant Goff. Conceding the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the implied findings of the jury as to negligence, appellants attack the court’s instructions as erroneously stating the law applicable to the case. Such errors may not be deemed harmless in a case such as this, appellants urge, because with the sharp conflict disclosed by the evidence the jury might well have rendered a verdict in their favor except for the instructions which are designated as erroneous and prejudicial.
Fifty-three separate instructions were given by the court. To nineteen of these appellants address their arguments, asserting either that they improperly state the law, that they are not warranted by the facts in the ease, that they inject new facts or that they are contradictory or argumentative. No useful purpose would be served by a detailed review of all the instructions and the numerous arguments by appellants and respondent relative thereto. It may be true that the charge to the jury was lengthy, involved and
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weighty; that the instructions in some particulars lacked the cardinal virtues of clarity, preciseness and simplicity. In complicated fact situations such as that presented in this case instructions are often unavoidably cumbersome, and it is quite possible that jurors may be in. a quandary as to what may actually be the law designated to guide them in their deliberations. But as stated by Mr. Chief Justice Waste in
Douglas
v.
Southern Pacific Co.,
The chief objection to the instructions is the claim that they placed upon appellants an unjust quantum of the burden of proof; that they in effect relieved respondent of his primary burden of establishing his position by the preponderance of the evidence. While such argument may appear plausible from certain language used by the court, we cannot reach the conclusion that the jurors attached to any vagrant word or phrase the importance for which appellants contend. Nor could the jurors have ignored the court’s oft-repeated admonition that “plaintiff is not entitled to recover unless you shall be satisfied by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the negligence of defendants was the sole proximate cause of the accident”; that “if you should . . . determine that plaintiff was negligent in any degree . . . however slight, your verdict should be for defendants, notwithstanding you may believe that the defendants were guilty”-—and similar instructions many times reiterated in the court’s charge.
“Instructions must be read and considered as a whole, and a questionable instruction is not ground for reversal when the respective rights and duties of the parties are clearly ascertainable from the charge as a whole.”
(Krohn
v.
Patrick,
12 Cal. App. (2d) 339 [
The only other point presented by appellants is that the damages awarded were excessive. Respondent suffered concussion of the brain, mental deterioration, dizziness, tremor, numerous injuries to nerves, leg, skin, bones and flesh; his left hip joint was broken, he was unconscious overnight, was hospitalized for forty-eight days and confined to bed at his home for two months thereafter. The injuries were severe and permanent; and it cannot be said that the award, although ample, suggests passion, prejudice or corruption on the part of the jury. The responsibility as to the question of excessive damages is primarily with the trial court, and an appellate tribunal may not interfere unless the award is so disproportionate to the injury as to indicate that it was not the result of the cool and dispassionate consideration of the jury.
(Holden
v.
Patten-Blinn Lumber Co.,
7 Cal. App. (2d) 220 [
Judgment affirmed.
Crail, P. J., and Wood, J., concurred.
A petition by appellants to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on June 25, 1936.
