11 A.2d 380 | Conn. | 1940
On January 21, 1938, the plaintiff, who was a tenant of a third floor apartment in the defendant's building at the corner of Zion and Arnold Streets in Hartford, fell and was injured on the common stairway of which the defendant retained control, by reason of ice thereon. At the trial the defendant conceded that he was negligent in permitting this condition, and the case was submitted to the jury solely upon the issues of the plaintiff's contributory negligence and of damages. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for $2800. The plaintiff has appealed from the denial of her motion to set aside the verdict as inadequate and from the judgment.
The evidence shows that the plaintiff, a married woman thirty-seven years of age living with her family, suffered an injury to her right knee by this fall, necessitating an exploratory operation in March and a second operation in December, 1938, each involving two weeks of hospitalization, and that the total expense for treatment of her injury was $689.93. There was also evidence of loss of earnings of $10 per week, and some as to expense for a helper to do her housework. It also appeared that she suffered pain and inconvenience, and that up to the time of trial in May, 1939, she had been unable fully to resume her usual duties and still had a partial incapacity of 15 per cent. in this knee. Patently, the jury in addition *362
to determining, as was its right, the amount to which the plaintiff was entitled as special damages, awarded the substantial balance of its verdict as general damages for the injury. The law furnishes no precise or definite rule for the assessment of the latter damages, but it must depend largely upon the judgment of the trier in the particular case. Samaha v. Mauro,
The plaintiff claims that the court erred in failing properly to expound in its charge to the jury the rule as to general damages, in that it dealt with neither permanent disability nor future loss of earnings as potential elements of her damage. In its charge concerning general damages the court correctly instructed the jury to the effect that what they found to be fair and reasonable compensation should be awarded therefor, and sufficiently referred to and explained as elements thereof pain and suffering, loss of sleep, and operative scars upon her knee, and then concluded "the entire condition should be considered, and your damages should be compensatory for all the elements of injury which one has sustained." There were no requests to charge. Neither permanent disability nor future loss of earnings was referred to in the charge. Whether this omission constituted error is to be tested by the finding and by that alone. Walters v. Hansen,
Upon the redirect examination of a doctor produced in chief as a witness by the plaintiff, her counsel asked this question: ". . . in your opinion will that right knee ever be as good again as it was before these injuries?" Upon the defendant's objection the court excluded the question. Suggesting, as it did, an answer in accord with the examiner's version upon this material issue, rather than calling for an expression of the witness' opinion concerning it phrased in his own words, this was a leading question. 3 Jones, Evidence (4th Ed.) 816; 2 Wigmore, Evidence (2d Ed.) 772; 28 R. C. L. 592, 183. Whether the trial judge shall permit the asking of leading questions upon redirect examination is within his discretion. Wright v. Blakeslee,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.