The suit was for damages for personal injuries caused plaintiff, Mrs. Kelley, by glass taken into her mouth while drinking from a coca-cola bottle, filled, capped and distributed by defendant for resale to the public. The negligence claimed was failure to exercise ordinary care to prevent pieces of glass from getting into the bottle while it was being filled, and to inspect it before it was sold and delivered, with glass in it, for resale to the public.
A trial to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for $10,300, and defendant has appealed, assigning two errors as grounds for reversal. One of these is, that the court erred in denying defendant’s motion to have the jury taken to its plant for a view of the machinery employed by
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it in the washing, sterilizing, filling and capping process. The other is, that it erred in overruling appellant’s motion for new-trial for excessiveness in the jury verdict. Neither of the grounds presents reversible error. The motion for a view was addressed to the discretion of the trial court, and the record wholly fails to show an abuse of that discretion. Had the court granted the requested view, defendant could not have successfully assigned error.
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Neither may defendant complain of its denial. On its second point, appellant stands no better, for, apart from the fact that, as appellees point out plaintiffs’ evidence made out a case of serious and prolonged nervous and physical damages and distress, a complaint of excessiveness in a verdict normally presents merely an error of fact and, therefore, nothing for appellate review. Southern Ry. Co. v. Walters, 8 Cir.,
In Maryland Cas. Co. v. Reid,
A circuit court of appeals, therefore, does not undertake to determine whether a verdict is excessive but only whether the district court abused its discretion in granting or refusing a new trial on the grounds of excessiveness. Detroit Taxicab Co. v. Pratt, 6 Cir.,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
Olsen v. North P. L. Co., C.C.,
