69 A.2d 83 | Pa. | 1949
Defendant appeals from judgment on a verdict for $30,000 in plaintiff's suit for personal injuries sustained when defendant's street car smashed into the rear of an automobile driven by plaintiff. Defendant now makes three points: (a) that the verdict is excessive, (b) that it is capricious and perverse, and (c) that the trial judge's reference in his charge to "the law of workmen's compensation in illustrating to the jury what is meant by present worth is not merely an unfortunate one but a wholly misleading and dangerous one, and one which cannot be regarded as harmless." There is no merit in any of these contentions.
The jury was justified in finding permanent injury, was faced with the problem of present worth and required instructions on the subject. The instruction complained of1 was not a model to be followed, but, on this record, could not possibly harm defendant. *370
While there should be no difficulty about it, appeals to this court seem to show some difficulty in adequately and simply instructing jurors on the subject. In Littman v. Bell TelephoneCo.,
The evidence, as the jury accepted it, shows that plaintiff was seriously injured. He sustained a compressed fracture of the fifth lumbar vertebra.2 He was, *371 at the time of the accident, 42 years old; employed at Jones Laughlin Steel plant in doing work requiring heavy lifting; he earned in excess of $2,000 a year. He is described as having been strong and vigorous prior to the accident, and now able to do only the lightest kind of work. We cannot say that this verdict was so excessive as to shock the conscience of the court.
In view of what has been said of points (a) and (c) the suggestion (b) that the verdict is capricious and perverse may be summarily dismissed.
Judgment affirmed.