99 So. 920 | Ala. | 1924
Plaintiff's automobile and defendant's auto truck were in collision at the corner of Conti and Hamilton streets in the city of Mobile, with result that plaintiff suffered bodily injuries and her automobile was damaged. Plaintiff's complaint declared as for (1) simple negligence and (2) wanton wrong. From a verdict and judgment in her favor plaintiff prosecutes this appeal, contending that the trial court committed errors *166 in rulings affecting the measure of damages claimed.
The fact that immediately upon the happening of the accident plaintiff "yelled" — to use the language of the witness, her daughter — "My back!" should have been admitted in evidence, as this court by analogy has frequently held. But the only tendency of the excluded evidence was to prove the fact that plaintiff's back had been hurt, and that was proved without dispute, so that we are unwilling to predicate reversible error of the court's ruling against this evidence.
Plaintiff's witness, her daughter, testified that "the night after the injury she [plaintiff] was not able to move or turn over," but this testimony was excluded on motion. Then, to quote the bill of exceptions, "the witness, continuing, stated" — whether in answer to specific interrogatory or not, does not appear — "that her mother complained dreadfully all night, and that the reason the witness said she could not turn over was that she had to help her over." To this "last statement" defendant objected; the court sustained the objection; and plaintiff excepted. Witness' reason for her statement in evidence was clearly inadmissible; and, further, the witness afterwards testified to the fact that "she had to turn her mother over," thereby removing any possibility of harm from the error. We are not of opinion that defendant's objection to the witness' "last statement" brought into question the testimony of the witness to the effect that "her mother complained dreadfully all night," or that plaintiff's exception, construed against her as it must be, has served to bring into review in this court the competency of that testimony. Moreover, the witness' characterization of plaintiff's complaining justified the ruling. She should have been required to state plain facts, as was done in Phillips v. Kelly,
Moreover, again, and apart from what has thus far been said, it is entirely clear upon the whole record that plaintiff got her case fully before the jury in every respect. Her injuries and their alleged consequences were described in completest detail, so that we can scarcely conceive that the testimony heretofore considered, if admitted in the form proposed by plaintiff, would have made any difference in the result.
A witness may testify to the appearance of a person, as this court has frequently decided; but in making the statements referred to in the second and third assignments of error the witness transgressed this rule of admissibility, and undertook to state as facts what of necessity were nothing more than inferences drawn by the witness.
Assignments 7 and 8 are not insisted upon in argument. The rulings appear to be harmless at worst.
The evidence has been considered, and we find in it no reasonable basis on which to charge defendant's driver with anything more than simple negligence. There was nothing, we think, in the circumstances shown in evidence to warrant in reason a finding that defendant's driver was conscious that injury would probably result as it did, or that, being so conscious, he drove defendant's truck with reckless indifference to such consequences — these being the essential elements of wanton wrong as defined in our decisions. Louisville Nashville v. Brown,
The tenth assignment of error is based upon the trial court's denial of plaintiff's motion for a new trial. In addition to the rulings already noticed, plaintiff, appellant, complains that the verdict should have been set aside on account of the inadequacy of the damages assessed. The argument is that the damages awarded, $500, barely covered the damages done to plaintiff's automobile and allowed nothing for the injuries suffered in her person. But upon consideration of the whole record we think it may be easily seen that the jury considered the damage to plaintiff's automobile to be remediable by the expenditure of $100, approximately, and that the balance of the assessment is to be credited to the jury's judgment of the physical hurt and pain suffered by plaintiff. The evidence was susceptible of this construction, and we are unable to say that the jury in adopting it were influenced by passion, prejudice, or improper motive. Montgomery L. T. Co. v. King,
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.