delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Lori A. Mrowca, was struck by a Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) bus while attempting to cross Jackson Boulevard near the crosswalk at Financial Place in Chicago. At trial before a jury, plaintiff insisted that she was one step outside the crosswalk when the bus struck her. Other testimony suggested, however, that she was walking quickly and bounded into the street without looking as much as a car length away from the crosswalk when the pedestrian signal changed to “walk.”
The jury returned a verdict against the CTA in the amount of $850,000, 1 but also set plaintiffs contributory negligence as being 60% of the total cause of the accident. It therefore assessed the CTA’s liability at $340,000. Although the jury concluded that plaintiff was 60% liablе for her own injuries, the jury’s verdict was rendered on a form that it had been instructed was reserved for use when the plaintiffs liability is less than 50%. In order to determine why the jury had used the less-than-50% verdict form, the trial court polled the jury as to whether it believed plaintiff had been 60% negligent. When the jury foreman and each of the jurors indicated in open court that she had been 60% negligent, the court entered judgment in favor of the CTA in accordance with sectiоn 2 — 1116 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2 — 1116 (West 1998)) (barring recovery to tort plaintiff whose “contributory fault” exceeds 50%). Plaintiff subsequently filed a motion for a new trial, which the court denied. This appeal followed.
Plaintiff first argues the jury’s verdict is “contradictory” and “legally inconsistent” and that it was therefore arbitrary for the court to decide to credit the jury’s finding of 60% negligence. It is entirely possible, she claims, that the jury intended by its verdict to award her $340,000 in damages consistent with the contributory fault law. She contends that there is “no way the Jury can find that Lori Mrowca was both 50% or less comparatively negligent as well as 60% comparatively negligent.”
The CTA argues that the jury’s verdict was consistent but that the jurors merely used the wrong verdict form in rendering that verdict. Any doubts as to the jury’s intention, the CTA claims, were made clear by the court’s polling of the jurors.
In general, this court will not reverse a trial court’s ruling on a motion fоr a new trial unless the trial court abused its discretion in refusing the motion. Tedeschi v. Burlington Northern R.R. Co.,
The jury in this case did not render an absolutely irreconcilable verdict. As the trial court recognized, the use of the same verdict form to find the plaintiff more than 50% liable for her own injuries and to assess damages against the defendant created a verdict that could not stand only in the form it was delivered to the court, but not one that was absolutely irreconcilable. In recognizing the inconsistency, the court carefully polled each juror as to the plaintiff’s fault and confirmed the jury’s determination that plaintiff was 60% liable for her own injuries. The fact that each juror repeatedly indicated to the court that the plaintiff was 60% liable, and the fact that the jury had reduced its award to plaintiff by 60% on the verdict form before being polled, left no doubt in the mind of the trial court as to the jury’s intention. At this point, the court properly entered judgment consistent with the juror’s findings and the law. See Western Springs Park District v. Lawrencе,
The cases in which irrеgularities in jury verdicts have been addressed support the trial court’s decision not to award plaintiff a new trial. See, e.g., Kleiss v. Cassida,
Plaintiff cites Wottawa Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Bock,
Unlike the scenarios in Wottowa and Johnson, the jury in this case did not make contradictory “findings.” This fact distinguishes those cases from this оne in which the jury rendered a consistent verdict on the wrong verdict form.
Plaintiff appears to assert that, because the jury found she was not responsible for $340,000 of her damages, she is entitled to receive this compеnsation, but the jury’s assessment of her damages cannot be given effect under Illinois law. A similar argument was made in Marek v. Stepkowski,
Plaintiff also argues that the jury’s verdict of 60% contributory negligence is against the manifest weight of the evidence and must be reversed. See Knight v. Haydary,
A review of the record, viewed in its light most favorable to the appellees, shows that several witnesses testified that plaintiff was moving quickly and not looking where shе was going when the bus hit her. Jacobs, the bus driver, testified that when he realized plaintiff would step into the street he immediately applied his brakes, but it was too late to avoid striking her. A finding of 60% contributory negligence is therefore not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
Finally, plaintiff argues that it was trial error for the court to allow witness Andrew Plunkett to testify on cross-examination regarding why he shouted to her a moment before her accident. Plaintiff objected when defendant asked Plunkett, “[wjhy did you shout the warning to her?” The court overruled the objection and Plunkett stated that he did so because he “believed that she was unaware of the bus coming from the west, and that if she took another step *** there was going to be a collision.”
We agree that Plunkett’s explanation as to why he shouted is of questionable relevancy. Some courts, however, have allowed a witness to dеscribe another person’s mental state as a means of effectively communicating the totality of the witness’s impressions. See, e.g., Zoerner v. Iwan,
Even if it was error for the court to allow Plunkett to state that he believed plaintiff was unaware of the bus, however, we cannot say that this testimony deprived plaintiff of a fair trial. See, e.g., Schaffner v. Chiсago & North Western Transportation Co.,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
CAMPBELL, PJ., and O’BRIEN, J., concur.
Notes
The jury itemized its damages finding as follows: disfigurement — $50,000; pain and suffering (past) — $100,000; pain and suffering (future) — $200,000; loss of enjoyment of normal life (past) — $200,000; loss of enjoyment of normal life (future) — $200,000; medical/podiatric expenses — $80,000; and lost wages— $20,000.
