This is a consolidated appeal by plaintiff Rodrigues and defendant Ripley from a judgment in the amount of $15,-000 pursuant to a jury verdict. Rodri-gues was injured when a plastic injection heel molding machine designed and manufactured by Ripley and owned by its subsidiary, Security Hеel Company, Rodrigues’ employer, closed on his hand causing permanent and total disability. Rodrigues seeks a new trial, alleging errors by the trial court and challenging the adequacy of the jury’s verdict, while Ripley attacks the sufficiency of the evidencе to support a finding of liability against it. We affirm in all respects.
We can dispose of the latter claim in short order. Plaintiff’s expert testified to three separate design defects in the molding machine,
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and expressed the opinion that the instructiоnal materials provided with the machine were inadequate. Defendant sought to minimize the importance of these alleged' defects. It also sought to prove that the accident could riot have occurred had Security Heel not rеmoved a safety gate from the machine, but there was evidence from which the jury could have concluded that this removal was a fore
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seeable possibility which did not supervene Ripley’s negligence.
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We are not prepared to hоld that the evidence and every legitimate inference that can be drawn therefrom, Bayamon Thom McAn v. Miranda,
Turning to plaintiff’s appeal, we dealt comprehensively with a claim that a jury verdict was excessive in Boston and Maine R. R. v. Talbert,
Rodrigues notes that a new trial will be granted where a verdict closely approximates the amount of speciаl damages claimed by a plaintiff who has suffered serious injury, since the jury has evidently failed to heed the court’s instructions on pain and suffering.
See e. g.,
Brown v. Richard H. Wacholz, Inc.,
Rodrigues next advances a series of allegedly erroneous rulings by the trial court as grounds for a new trial. We note at the outset that a motion for a new trial is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court and its decision will be reversed only where abuse of discretion is shown. Dumas v. MaсLean,
Rodrigues first alleges that the court below erred in failing to submit his claim of strict liability in tort to the jury. Even if this was error we doubt that it was prejudicial. The jury concluded on the evidence that Ripley had designed the molding machine negligently. “Since proper design is a matter of reasonable fitness, the strict liability adds littlе or nothing to negligence on the part of the manufacturer.” W. Prosser, Torts § 99 n. 72 (1971). As Rodrigues himself concedes, the two claims merge. The New Hampshire comparative negligence statute applies to claims for strict liability in tort, Cyr v. B. Offen & Co.,
Rodrigues next attacks the court’s exclusion of proffered testimony that the wiring diagram showed the molding machine was designed with a “momentary contact” emergency stop button. Such a switch must be held down continuously to keep the machine from operating and is consequently less safe than a “maintain contact” switch. The evidence was excluded on the ground that Rodrigues had failed to include this claim in his pretrial enumeration of al
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leged defects. The pretrial statement “controls the subsequent course of the action,” Fed.R.Civ.P. 16, and the trial court is endowed with discretion to exclude non-conforming evidence.
See, e. g.,
Wiggins v. City of Philadelphia,
Rodrigues next contends that the trial judgе abused his discretion in refusing to order a new trial despite the possibility that the jury overheard his statement addressed to counsel at the bench that he might set aside the verdict in the event plaintiff did get one. There is no evidence beyond Rodrigues’ naked assertion that the jury actually heard the remark, and his counsel failed to remind the court to poll the jury on this matter after the verdict as the judge had seemingly agreed to do. Further, the trial judge clearly instructed the jury not to try to infer his opinion of the сase from any of his remarks during the trial. We think this contention is without merit.
At the view of the molding machine conducted for the jury before trial began, Ripley’s counsel inserted into the mold area a bar similar to the one issued to Rodrigues for use in freeing heels lоdged in the mold to indicate comparative dimensions. Ripley argued at trial that the dimensions were such that Rodrigues could not have been injured as he was had he used the safety bar to dislodge the heel caught in the mold. Rodrigues claims that this was an improper experiment at a view and urges that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to caution the jury that the demonstration was not evidence and in denying his motion for a new trial on this ground. Although counsel may not conduct tests or experiments at a view, Chouinard v. Shaw,
Affirmed.
Notes
. These were that it lacked a safety bar which the operator could place between the mold faces to hold the mold apart while working between thе jaws; that it lacked a warning light on the control panel indicating that there was power to the mold clamp circuit; and that it lacked a gate over the entire mold area with an electrical interlock switch breaking power to the mоld clamp when the gate was opened. Ripley did provide the machine with a smaller safety gate which Security Heel had removed.
. Ripley’s engineer was aware that gates had been removed at Ripley’s home plant in order to aсcommodate water hoses designed to rectify molding problems, and he had had an opportunity to notice when visiting Security Heel’s plant that the gates were not in use there.
. “It is well settled that the question of ex-cessiveness of a verdict is primarily for the trial court and its determination thereof will not be reversed on appeal except for manifest abuse of discretion. . . . The reason for this rule is that the trial court has had the benefit of hearing the testimony, of observing the demeanоr of the witnesses and also knows the community and its standards. On appeal, therefore, we are reluctant to overturn jury verdicts on the ground of excessiveness. . To constitute such an abuse of discretion the award must be shocking.”
. The jury could have inferred from the evidence that Rodrigues had attempted to dislodge a heel stuck in the mold with his bare hand instead of a brass rod, that he failed to activate the emergency stop button, or that he was carelessly perched atop the rim of a water bin in front of the machine instead of remaining on the floor.
. Our necessity to speculate under these circumstances underscores the desirability of the court putting to the jury the special question of the degree, if any, of a plaintiff’s fаult.
. Rodrigues strenuously argues that the rule that contributory negligence is a defense to an action based on strict liability, enunciated in Buttriek v. Arthur Lessard & Sons, Inc.,
