108 Misc. 291 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1919
The authority conferred upon the trial court by section 999 of the Code of Civil Procedure to set aside a verdict because the same is for excessive damages, involves the exercise of a sound judicial discretion. The power in a proper case must be exercised. The courts, as was said by Mr. Justice Cullen in Meade v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co., 3 App. Div. 432, “ are very chary of interfering with the award of damages made by juries, but there must come a point at which it is our duty to intervene.” In the present case, the plaintiff recovered a verdict of $48,000 for personal injuries. He is a clergyman of eminence. He had a severe fall occasioned by stepping into an open space in the night-time on the defendant’s unlighted and unguarded elevated railroad stairs leading to one of its stations where one of the steps was out. He was seriously injured. His right wrist was badly fractured and his hipbone suffered a similar result. He walks with a limp, and has not the free use of his right hand. Notwithstanding these serious impairments, he is enabled to follow his vocation and to write without substantial physical restriction. His expenditures incurred in an endeavor
Ordered accordingly.