16 Utah 356 | Utah | 1898
This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by the plaintiff, Honora Murray, while a passenger on defendant’s car, because of the negligent operation thereof. The jury returned a verdict for $500 in favor of the plaintiffs, who are husband and wife. Judgment was entered accordingly, and a motion for a new trial denied. Thereupon the defendant appealed.
The principal contention on behalf of the appellant is that “the court, upon appellant’s motion for a new trial, should either have granted a new trial, or should have reduced the damages as excessive.” By this proposition it is, in effect, conceded that the respondent is entitled to some damages, and the real substance of the contention is simply that tin; amount allowed by the verdict and judgment is excessive, under the evidence. The question of the amount of damages to be allowed in such a case is one of fact for the jury and the trial court to determine, and we cannot interfere with their judgment as to what sum shall be awarded, unless there is no legitimate proof in the record to sustain it. Mangum v. Mining Co., 15 Utah 534. Whether or not, under all the evidence, the court ought to have granted a new trial, it cannot be successfully maintained that there is no legitimate proof in the record to support the verdict and judgment. Mrs. Murray, who is one of the plaintiffs, and the party alleged to be injured, testified, among other things, that she, in company with Mrs. Phelps, stepped on defendant’s car, but, before she could get inside, the motorman started the car with a sudden jerk, which threw her back on the back part of the car; that something struck her as she fell back; that the shock was so sudden that she could not tell exactly where it struck her, but she was
It is also insisted for the appellant that the court erred in refusing to permit the witness Mrs. Phelps to answer the following question: “Did you observe any sudden jolt or jerk of the car which would be sufficient, in your judgment, to cause any trouble or distress to a woman who was three months and a half advanced?” The ruling of the court was correct. The question not only required the witness to give her opinion on what was a subject for expert testimony, without having shown her to be an expert, but also called for a conclusion as to facts from which, if detailed to the jury by the witness, the jury could’draw their own inference.
It is further insisted that the court erred in not permitting the witness Needham to state what was said on the car by Mrs. Phelps, after the accident. Whatever may have been said by her on the car was not shown to have been a part of the res gestee, and anything which may have been said after the occurrence by mere bystanders was wholly immaterial, and properly excluded. We find no reversible error in the record. The judgment is affirmed.