56 Mich. 638 | Mich. | 1885
The court having in this case determined that the substantial damages for which the plaintiff claimed to recover were too remote, the defendant moves for final judgment. It is conceded that under the opinion of this-Court the plaintiff had a technical right of action, and that the court below erred in holding otherwise; but the motion is grounded on the principle, well established in this Court, that where the case is such that on a new trial the party com
To make the principle applicable it must clearly be seen that an award of damages, sufficient to carry costs, would be unwarranted. It should therefore appear in this case that if the jury were to give damages to the amount of one hundred dollars, their verdict would manifestly be so excessive that it would be the duty of the Court to set it aside on that ground. The injury complained of was the being carried, as a passenger on defendant’s cars, on a somewhat inclement night, a hundred rods beyond the station where he should have been left, and there left alone, and with misinformation which had a tendency to mislead, to find his way in the darkness as best he might to the highway, which he supposed was in one direction, but which in fact proved to be in another. On the record before us this wrong appears clearly established; and the question now is whether we can say that an award of damages for this, sufficient to carry costs, even though no special injury should be shown to have resulted, could be held excessive.
The Court are not agreed that such would be the case, and a new trial must therefore be ordered with costs of this Court to plaintiff.
I do not think that where plaintiff expected to walk a considerable distance, the addition of a quarter of a mile could add appreciably to his damages or make them more than nominal.